SQLServerCentral Editorial

Limits, Not Goals

I just saw one of "those" questions. You know the ones: 'We're hitting an error with a stored procedure. What is the maximum number of parameters you can have?" <sigh> Look, I get it. Breaking the land speed record is cool. Getting the most people into a phone booth (look it up), also cool. Fastest, […]

Technical Article

Fun with PowerShell Asynchronous

Imagine a candle that is lit and takes 1 hour to burn out. Now imagine one hundred candles. How many hours will it last? That depends. If they are lit simultaneously, it will take 1 hour. That is the basic idea of running in the background or asynchronously. Of course, the 100 candles can execute independently of one another, unlike if you try to run 100 processes on a computer with 2 cores. PowerShell has some ways to manage that, as PowerShell job – which we will see in this article – runspaces – needs to add programmable using .net.

Blogs

No Shortcuts for the SQLCMD Batch Terminator: #SQLNewBlogger

By

I was messing around with SQLCMD and I realized something I hadn’t known. I’ve...

Where Is My SQL Agent? Running Scheduled Jobs Against Azure SQL Database

By

One of the first things I review when I inherit a new SQL Server...

AgentDBA vs Critical SQL Server

By

It’s 07:43. Someone’s already left a message. “Something’s wrong with the DB server.” You...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Increment a number in a SQL Query based on a value

By bswhipp

I have an issue where I have a Bill of Material list of items...

Follow Your Hunch

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Follow Your Hunch

What Happens When You Ask a Local AI to Query Your Database?

By Kumar Abhishek

Comments posted to this topic are about the item What Happens When You Ask...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Detecting Characters

I have a SQL Server 2022 English default installation on a server. I want to detect if there are any upper case characters in rows and I have this code:

SELECT CustomerNameID,
       CustomerName
 FROM dbo.CustomerName
 WHERE CustomerName = LOWER(CustomerName)
Here is the sample data I am testing with:
CustomerNameID CustomerName
1              John Smith
2              Sarah Johnson
3              MICHAEL WILLIAMS
4              JENNIFER BROWN
5              david jones
6              emily davis
7              Robert Miller
8              LISA WILSON
9              christopher moore
10             Amanda Taylor
How many rows are returned?

See possible answers