When databases are being designed and developed, your developers might have overlooked creating clustered indexes on some of your database tables. Having a useful clustered index on your tables will improve the performance of your queries. Here Greg Larsen shows a simple script to identify those tables in your database that don’t have a clustered index.
With the GDPR in effect, Steve Jones talks about the changes that are taking place for many organizations.
R Services provides in-database analytics in SQL Server 2016. In this article we step through configuring R Services and get you started with in-database analytics.
In this article, Robert Cain describes the steps to set up a VM using PowerShell using his PSAzure module.
We’ve blogged a couple times about how clustered index key columns get stored in your nonclustered indexes.
But where they get stored is a matter of weird SQL trivia. You see, it depends on how you define your nonclustered index.
Optimizing Azure SQL Database performance often begins with identifying the most resource-intensive queries. Understanding...
By gbargsley
This is Week 2 of PowerShell Strikes Back – a four-week May series for...
PlanTrace Now Supports PostgreSQL The same plan analysis you know from...
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In the new VECTOR_DISTANCE() function in SQL Server 2025, the first parameter is the distance_metric. What is this?
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