SQLServerCentral Article

The IDENTITY Column Property

There are a number of ways to generate key values in SQL Server tables including the IDENTITY column property, the NEWID() function and more recently, SEQUENCES. The IDENTITY column property is the earliest of these methods. It was introduced very early in the history of SQL Server and it is arguably the simplest approach. Though old, IDENTITY is still maintained in modern versions of SQL Server and is still relevant for simple use cases.

External Article

Run SQL Server Agent Job from SSIS

While we can schedule SQL Server Agent jobs and SSRS report subscriptions, the actual time that we want to run them is dependent on when certain processing in our SSIS packages is completed. We also have certain business rules surrounding launching these jobs that we need to enforce which the built-in scheduling capabilities cannot accommodate. For example, we execute a SQL Server Reporting Services (SSRS) report subscription every Monday at 8:00AM but we want to skip it if the current week coincides with our month end processing which will also execute a report subscription for the same report. Can you provide a solution that we can use to accomplish this?

Blogs

Learn about Modern Microsoft Apps in San Diego

By

I wrote about learning today for the editorial: I Can’t Make You Learn. I...

How To Deploy Fabric SQL and Azure SQL Databases with Azure DevOps

By

Fabric has CI/CD built in, but if you've tried to use it for database...

A New Word: Attriage

By

attriage – n. the state of having lost all control over how you feel...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

SSRS Reminded Me of the Time Microsoft Retired TMG

By Marko Coha

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SSRS Reminded Me of the...

Getting results from a Procedure to join to a query

By bswhipp

I have a need to execute a stored procedure and return the results to...

Upgrade 2016 Standard to 2022 Express

By pdanes

Title pretty much says it all - can this be done? I've tried several...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

BIT_COUNT II

In SQL Server 2025, I have a table (dbo.UserPermission) that contains this data:

UserID  UserPermissions
15
23
37
4       NULL
What is returned when I run this code:
select bit_count(UserPermissions) as PermissionCount
from dbo.UserPermission
where UserID = 4;

See possible answers