SQLServerCentral Article

Mathematicians and SQL

Georg Ferdinand Ludwig Philipp Cantor is considered the creator of set theory, and his theories are the basis for the naïve set theory you learned in school. But there are lots of other mathematicians you should know, such as Hilbert, Frege, Russell, Zermelo and Dedekind. They made a lot of contributions, too. Hilbert Hilbert is […]

External Article

DAX financial functions: Depreciation calculations

Business Intelligence Architect, Analysis Services Maestro, and author Bill Pearson continues his series surrounding the DAX financial functions. In this article, he exposes four functions that are popular in the calculation of depreciation and amortization. Those accustomed to these functions within Excel will find the syntax, uses and operation of the functions familiar within the Power BI environment.

Blogs

Accelerating AI with Confidence: Why Microsoft Purview is Key to Responsible Innovation

By

Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant concept. It is here, embedded in the...

The Mystery of SQL Server 2025’s New Tricks – Scooby Dooing Episode 5

By

Every Scooby-Doo mystery starts with a haunted house, a strange villain, and a trail...

A Prompt AI Experiment

By

Prompt AI released recently and I decided to try a few things with the...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

statistics callection intervel in query store ?

By rajemessage 14195

Statistics Collection Interval: Defines the level of granularity for the collected runtime statistic, expressed...

Rounding Off issue in SQL Server

By vikramchander90

I am using Microsoft SQL Server 2022 (RTM-CU17) (KB5048038) - 16.0.4175.1 (X64)  Microsoft Corporation...

how to get notification that my database has corssed 8gb

By rajemessage 14195

i have sqlexpress on rds, is there any way i can get notifacation that...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

SQL Server, Heaps and Fragmentation

A table without a clustered index (heap) will NOT suffer from fragmentation during frequent updates or deletes. True or False?

See possible answers