Before SQL Server 2025, if you want to store JSON data in Microsoft SQL Server or Azure SQL DB, and you want fast queries, the easiest way is to:
Getting something done is important, but so is the quality level. Steve has a few thoughts today.
This article presents a way to discover those tables that are unused over a period of time, along with suggestions on how to get rid of these tables.
This tutorial will discuss using variables with SQL DECLARE along with various examples.
Learn about filtered indexes in SQL Server, how they work, and how they can help improve performance.
Today Steve tasks data modeling and wonders how many people still build and maintain models.
Short story: what the title says.
I'm writing this while in hiding at the PASS Data Community Summit that's taking place in Seattle this week. I just had a real surprise, finding out that DocumentDB is PostgreSQL under the covers and always has been. However, as much as I enjoy talking PostgreSQL, for the moment, I'll shut up about it. Instead, […]
By Arun Sirpal
It’s 07:43. Someone’s already left a message. “Something’s wrong with the DB server.” You...
By davebem
I’ve had a Dropbox account for years. Like a lot of people, I started...
By Zikato
Someone hacked Digitown's municipality and stole classified documents. 45 million rows of router traffic,...
hi a peer of mine who ive never known to be wrong says a...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Displaying Money
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Slow Growing Problems
I want to get the currency sign displayed with my amount stored in a money type. Does this work?
DECLARE @Amount MONEY; SET @Amount = '?1500'; SELECT CAST( @Amount AS VARCHAR(30)) AS EurosSee possible answers