External Article

Reusing T-SQL Code

Alex Kuznetsov, in an article taken from his book 'Defensive Database Programming with SQL Server', shows how DRY principles can be put in practice with constraints, stored procedures, triggers, UDFs and indexes.

External Article

How to Get SQL Server Dates and Times Horribly Wrong

One of the times that you need things to go right is when you are doing analysis and reporting. This is generally based on time and date. A sure-fire way of getting managers upset is to get the figures horribly wrong by messing up the way that you handle datetime values in SQL Server. In the interests of peace, harmony and a long career in BI, Robert Sheldon outlines some of the worst mistakes you can make when using SQL Server dates.

Blogs

Flyway Tips: AI Generating Migration Script Names

By

AI is a big deal in 2026, and at Redgate, we’re experimenting with how...

The Book of Redgate: Get the right stuff done

By

Another of our values: The facing page has this quote: “We admire people who...

Runing tSQLt Tests with Claude

By

Running tSQLt unit tests is great from Visual Studio but my development workflow...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

No Defaults Passwords Ever

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item No Defaults Passwords Ever

Introduction of OPTIMIZE_FOR_SEQUENTIAL_KEY = ON

By saum70

Hi, We have low latency high volume system. I have a table having 3...

The Long Name

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Long Name

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

The Long Name

I run this code to create a table:Create table with unicode nameWhen I check the length, I get these results:Table with length of name shown as 132 charactersA table name is limited to 128 characters. How does this work?

See possible answers