Scripts

Technical Article

How to get last restore date and orginal DBName.

This script will output the Orignal DB Name, Destination DB Name and Last Restore date for the databases. You get a specific database just add a where clause against the appropriate field. It makes use of the restorehistory and backupset tables in the MSDB database.

(6)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-04-11

2,578 reads

Technical Article

Database structure queries

Gets most important information of database structure. This includes all user tables, their fields, datatypes, defaults (including default constraint names), etc, primary keys and their fields, unique constraints and their fields, check constraints (including their conditions), foreign key constraints and their fields aswell as any other indexes and their fields. Should be quite useful for […]

(2)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-04-08

3,061 reads

Blogs

Stop Using Pandas for Aggregations — Try DuckDB Instead

By

If you've ever loaded a 2 GB CSV into pandas just to run a...

Understanding Fabric Ontology

By

What problem is Fabric Ontology trying to solve? For years, most data conversations have...

QUOTENAME Basics: #SQLNewBlogger

By

Recently I ran across some code that used a lot of QUOTENAME() calls. A...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

The New Software Team

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The New Software Team

Database Mail in SQL Server 2022

By Abdellateef Ibrahim

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Database Mail in SQL Server...

The string_agg function

By Alessandro Mortola

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The string_agg function

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

The string_agg function

We create the following table and then insert some records in it:

create table t1 (
   id int primary key,
   category char(1) not null,
   product varchar(50)
);

insert into t1 values
(1, 'A', 'Product 1'),
(2, 'A', 'Product 2'),
(3, 'A', 'Product 3'),
(4, 'B', 'Product 4'),
(5, 'B', 'Product 5');
What happens if we execute the following query in both Sql Server and PostgreSQL?
select id, 
category, 
string_agg(product, ';')
                 over (partition by category order by id
                 rows between unbounded preceding and unbounded following) as stragg
from t1;

See possible answers