External Article

SQL Server 2019 is Here

On Monday, Sep 24, 2018, at the Ignite 2018 conference, Microsoft announced the first public preview of SQL Server 2019 (community technical preview (CTP) release of SQL Server 2.0).This new release of SQL Server is packed with many new features to improve performance, integrate your increasing volumes of corporate data, beef up security, and more.

External Article

Extended Events Workbench

The Extended Events (or XEvents) feature has been part of SQL Server since 2008, but many database professionals struggle to get started using it. In this article, Phil Factor demonstrates several useful Extended Event sessions that measure just one thing in each. He then provides the code necessary to parse the resulting XML into something you can use.

Blogs

Database AI Agents: The Read-Only Rule

By

Fourth in a series on Ai and databases. What Read-Only Advisory Actually Means A...

Creating a SQL Stored Procedure to Load a SCD2

By

This is a blog that I am writing for future me and hopefully it’ll...

Funny Money: #SQLNewBlogger

By

While wandering around the documentation looking for some Question of the Day topics, I...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Pro SQL Server Internals

By Site Owners

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Pro SQL Server Internals

SQL ART: Who's Blocking Who? Visualising SQL Server Blocking With Spatial Geometry

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL ART: Who's Blocking Who?...

Running SQLCMD II

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Running SQLCMD II

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Running SQLCMD II

I run this command to start SQLCMD:

sqlcmd -S localhost -E -c "proceed"
At the prompt, I type this (the 1> and 2> are prompts):
1> select @@version
2> go
What happens?

See possible answers