How to Programmatically Determine Which Edition of SQL Server is Installed
Greg Larsen shows you how to determine if you are running the standard, enterprise, or developer edition of SQL Server.
Greg Larsen shows you how to determine if you are running the standard, enterprise, or developer edition of SQL Server.
We met SQL.ARRAY in the last step. Now say hello to SQL.MAP, which can store pairs of values.
The easiest way of explaining how a DevOps approach to database deployment can dramatically speed up the process is to use the term ‘shift-left’. By performing, or at least...
In an effort to make leading wildcard searches sargable, Aaron Bertrand plays around with a trigram-type implementation in SQL Server.
Machine learning and AI are becoming more and more prevalent, which Steve Jones thinks is good.
In this article, you will learn how to troubleshoot error when you try to launch the main Dashboard Report.
This week Steve looks at the challenges of security for medical data.
SQL Server Encryption is an essential part of what is required for protecting data. Column-level encryption can be a very effective way of doing this. In the first in a series of articles on the theme of SQL Server Encryption, Robert Sheldon once more makes it all seem easy.
By Arun Sirpal
It’s 07:43. Someone’s already left a message. “Something’s wrong with the DB server.” You...
By davebem
I’ve had a Dropbox account for years. Like a lot of people, I started...
By Zikato
Someone hacked Digitown's municipality and stole classified documents. 45 million rows of router traffic,...
hi a peer of mine who ive never known to be wrong says a...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Displaying Money
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Slow Growing Problems
I want to get the currency sign displayed with my amount stored in a money type. Does this work?
DECLARE @Amount MONEY; SET @Amount = '?1500'; SELECT CAST( @Amount AS VARCHAR(30)) AS EurosSee possible answers