Scripts

Technical Article

Parse a delimited string, return n-th value

This UDF will parse a string delimited by the character you specify and return the value in the n-th position you requested.Example:select dbo.fn_parse('this string', ' ', 1) --> 'this'select dbo.fn_parse('this string', ' ', 2) --> 'string'select dbo.fn_parse('this string', ' ', 3) --> NULLselect dbo.fn_parse('this  string', ' ', 2) --> ''

(1)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-05-10

506 reads

Technical Article

Retrieve default value for parameter in procedure

This procedure will return DEFAULT value for the parameter in the stored procedure. Usage: Use pubs go declare @Value varchar(30) exec _GetParamDefault 'random_password','@password_type',@value OUTPUT SELECT @VALUE Also accepts different versions, by default, if not specified, first version info retrieved. exec _GetParamDefault 'random_password;2','@password_type',@value

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-05-10

345 reads

Technical Article

Check in New DDL to SourceSafe

Rather than invent (or learn) a whole new set of tools to preserve and version all DDL underneath our databases, we decided to use SourceSafe (something we're already using for all other source code). -- We've developed this VBscript to run nightly; it recreates object-level DDL in a given database and compares each object's script […]

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-05-09

158 reads

Technical Article

Multiple Replace

Like the replace function, but can replace more than 1 value at a time.e.g. select dbo.multiple_replace('hello', 'e', '1', default) gives 'h1llo'.  Equivalent to: select replace('hello', 'e', '1')e.g. select dbo.multiple_replace('hello world', 'e;w;ld', '1;2;END', default) gives 'h1llo 2orEND'e.g. select dbo.multiple_replace('hello world', 'e$w$ld', '1$2$END', '$') gives 'h1llo 2orEND'

(1)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-05-09

466 reads

Technical Article

Scalar Function to Determine Age at a Given Date

This function was written to supplant cumbersome age-at calculations.  To execute, simply set a local INT variable equal to the output of the function.  For example, the following, given my birthdate, computes my own age:    DECLARE @age_at INT    SET @age_at = dbo.f_age_at ('2/16/1954', GETDATE ())

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-05-09

1,068 reads

Blogs

Microsoft Build 2026 announcements

By

Once again there were a number of Microsoft Build announcements related to data and...

T-SQL Tuesday #199: Roundup

By

A good week ago I hosted the monthly T-SQL Tuesday blog party. I invited...

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...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Changes, Happiness, and a Few Tears

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Changes, Happiness, and a Few...

BCP on Linux

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item BCP on Linux

You Probably Don't Need a Vector Database

By Kumar Abhishek

Comments posted to this topic are about the item You Probably Don't Need a...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

BCP on Linux

When running bcp on Linux, what is the field terminator?

See possible answers