Bad Management
Bad managers are everywhere, but we can improve and help them with some ideas from other companies. That's if we, as an organization, value our staff.
Bad managers are everywhere, but we can improve and help them with some ideas from other companies. That's if we, as an organization, value our staff.
Index maintenance can be a real headache for database administrators as tables grow larger and maintenance windows shrink. In this article, Greg Larsen demonstrates resumable index operations available with SQL Server 2017 and 2019. This feature helps DBAs work around those small maintenance windows by allowing certain index operations to be paused and restarted again later.
This week's poll asks about virtualization in your environment. Let us know if you are moving your SQL Server to virtual machines.
In this tip we look at how to configure Azure Data Factory to move data from an on-premises SQL Server database to an Azure SQL Database.
The biggest government hack ever occurred recently. At least until the next one happens.
Organizations may have many concerns about performance when migrating databases to Azure. Fortunately, Microsoft provides some great tools to help improve performance and save money. In this article, Monica Rathbun explains how to take advantage of these features.
With backup compression you can speed up our backups, while making your backups smaller.
A minor disaster in Colorado reminds Steve about the need to prepare, and think about the failure points in our preparations.
A new version of an existing application doesn't always provide an upgrade.
New releases of SQL Server arrive at a quick pace, and it's difficult to keep up with the many features introduced in each version. In this article, Phil Factor reviews a feature you may have missed, inline indexes. He covers the syntax and the many ways they can be used and then performs some performance tests to see if they can make a difference with table variables.
By Steve Jones
I type fairly well. Well, I type fast, but I do wear out a...
By ReviewMyDB
Index maintenance has always meant nightly jobs and a window you have to defend....
I’m sure you’ve all heard the tale of Goldilocks and the Three Bears, but...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL Art, Part 4: Happy...
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Comments posted to this topic are about the item Cognitive Coverage
I have this data in the dbo.Commission table in a SQL Server 2022 database.
salesperson commission Brian 12 Brian 16 Andy 7 Andy 14 Andy 21 Steve 20 Steve NULLAll the data is a varchar, and I decide to run this query to get the totals for each salesperson.
SELECT SalesPerson
, AVG(TRY_PARSE(Commission AS int)) AS TotalCommission
FROM commission
GROUP BY SalesPerson
GO
What average commission is calculated for Steve? See possible answers