SQLServerCentral Editorial

Who is that masked man anyway?

If you are holding, in your organisation, personal data about real people or commerce, it is wrong, and in many cases illegal to do database development work or testing using your production data. This, of course, probably applies to a minority of database systems, but data breaches caused by attacking backups or copies of production […]

External Article

PowerShell Just Enough Administration

A major difficulty for a System Administrator who wishes to provide access for auditors, Helpdesk staff, developers and other IT people is that adminstrator roles give users more access than they need. It is too easy to make mistakes, or to make more changes than those that were signed-off. With JEA, it is possible to create role-based access control (RBAC) endpoints that define precisely what actions you’ll let your users carry out without needing a elevated, privileged administrator credentials, and which log and report all operations.

Blogs

Setting Up a Mac for Data Engineering and AI Work

By

If you work with data pipelines, SQL, notebooks, or machine learning models, a Mac...

Want to look at cloud reporting but not sure what the costs will be?

By

Have you been thinking about migrating your reporting to Microsoft Fabric or Snowflake but...

The Joyful Craftsmen and the Revolt BI join forces

By

The Joyful Craftsmen has become the new owner of Revolt BI. The merger creates...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

SQL Art, Part 4: Happy 4th of July — A British DBA's Guide to Celebrating a War We Don't Talk About

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL Art, Part 4: Happy...

SQL Server Enum Implementation: A Single-Row View Strategy for Avoiding Magic Values

By Ivica Borscak

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL Server Enum Implementation: A...

BIT_COUNT I

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item BIT_COUNT I

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

BIT_COUNT I

In SQL Server 2025, I have a table (dbo.UserPermission) that contains this data:

UserID  UserPermissions
15
23
37
What is returned when I run this code:
select bit_count(UserPermissions) as PermissionCount
from dbo.UserPermission
where UserID = 3;

See possible answers