SQLServerCentral Editorial

Mentors and Professional Groups

When wrestling with technical problems or ideas, it is good to discuss with, argue against, present ideas to, and listen to your colleagues. This is true of anyone working in IT, but really important for the likes of database professionals who are engaged in a very rapidly-developing engineering specialism that demands that you keep up […]

External Article

Connecting to SQL Data Warehouse

The most frustrating thing with any new system is often just working out how to connect to it. Oddly, you can’t use SSMS with SQL Data Warehouse, but it is fine with SSDT, SSIS, Power BI desktop, sqlcmd, BCP, and a range of Microsoft cloud services - there are PowerShell Cmdlets too. Rob Sheldon provides the details.

Blogs

Database AI Agents: The Read-Only Rule

By

Fourth in a series on Ai and databases. What Read-Only Advisory Actually Means A...

Creating a SQL Stored Procedure to Load a SCD2

By

This is a blog that I am writing for future me and hopefully it’ll...

Funny Money: #SQLNewBlogger

By

While wandering around the documentation looking for some Question of the Day topics, I...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Pro SQL Server Internals

By Site Owners

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Pro SQL Server Internals

SQL ART: Who's Blocking Who? Visualising SQL Server Blocking With Spatial Geometry

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL ART: Who's Blocking Who?...

Running SQLCMD II

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Running SQLCMD II

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Running SQLCMD II

I run this command to start SQLCMD:

sqlcmd -S localhost -E -c "proceed"
At the prompt, I type this (the 1> and 2> are prompts):
1> select @@version
2> go
What happens?

See possible answers