PowerShell Solutions - Working with files
When we administer a SQL Database, we always have to work with files. This new article shows how to handle them using PowerShell.
When we administer a SQL Database, we always have to work with files. This new article shows how to handle them using PowerShell.
Asking questions in an interview is important, but there can be issues. Steve Jones talks a little about how to approach this.
Greg Larson explains that SQL Server provides a couple of different ways to delete backup and restore history. If you want to remove backup and restore information for all databases based on a date you can use the sp_delete_backuphistory system stored procedure. Or you can use the system stored procedure named sp_delete_database_backuphistory if you want to remove all backup and restore history for a specific database.
What happens if we can't access the Internet? We should be prepared, at home and work. Steve Jones has a few comments.
Data types are an important part of how tables and variables work. Did you know that constants have databases too?
This week Steve Jones looks at the idea of using AI and machine learning with your data to develop amazing new insight.
The ALL, SOME and ANY predicates aren't much used in SQL Server, but they are there. You can use the Exists() predicate instead but the logic is more contorted and difficult to read at a glance. Set-oriented predicates can greatly simplify the answering of many real-life business questions, so it is worth getting familiar with them. Joe Celko explains.
Steve Jones gave a keynote, and has a little fun this week with the topic of his talk.
Although SQL Server for Linux removes the concern that adopting SQL Server forces you to also adopt the Windows platform, it could also provide a useful alternative platform, and a more obvious alternative to Oracle. There are, however, several obvious concerns as to how such a product could ever achieve parity with the existing Windows-based product. Microsoft have made an interesting move with several ramifications, as Robert Sheldon explains.
If you've ever loaded a 2 GB CSV into pandas just to run a...
By James Serra
What problem is Fabric Ontology trying to solve? For years, most data conversations have...
By Steve Jones
Recently I ran across some code that used a lot of QUOTENAME() calls. A...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Stairway to Reliable Database Deployment...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item QUOTENAME Quote Parameters
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Limit the Blast Radius
When I use QUOTENAME(), I can optionally provide the character used to surround the string in the result. Can I use any character?
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