External Article

The Basics of Good T-SQL Coding Style

TSQL Code must work properly and efficiently. That's not enough though. Unless you are working alone, have perfect memory and plan to never change job, then you need to comment and document your code, it must be inherently readable, well laid out, use informative and obvious names, and it must be robust and resilient; written defensively. It must not rely on deprecated features of SQL Server, or assume particular database settings. Robert Sheldon starts a series of articles that explains the basics.

Blogs

T-SQL Tuesday #198 Roundup: How Do You Detect Data Changes?

By

Thank you to everyone who participated in T-SQL Tuesday #198! When I wrote the...

Optimizing Redshift Performance by Configuring WLM Queues

By

Efficient query performance in Amazon Redshift often comes down to how well you manage...

PowerShell Strikes Back: Return of the Loop

By

Welcome back to PowerShell Strikes Back. We’re three weeks in, and the training is...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Dealing with huge heap tables

By JasonO

Recently, our dev teams approach me for advice on improving their huge heap table...

Merge Replication failing with Error converting data type nvarchar to numeric

By Leo.Miller

After upgrading 2 Merge Replicated databases to SQL 2022 and re-establishing the Merge Replication...

Why Your Index Isn't Being Used? - Reading Execution Plans to Find the Real Culprit

By Sanket Parmar

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Why Your Index Isn't Being...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Distance Metric Algorithms

What are the distance metric algorithms that can be used in VECTOR_DISTANCE()?

See possible answers