Scripts

Technical Article

Grouped Failover, a 2008R2 version of Availability Groups

One of the new cool features in SQL 2012 is the SQL Server Availability groups. In other words being able to failover a group of databases which are logically connected. i.e. SharePoint databases. Well, it is also possible to do that in SQL 2008 (R2). It’s called a Grouped Failover.

(1)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2013-01-24 (first published: )

574 reads

Technical Article

GetDateInString

This function will return a value of date if found within a string, the date format in the string will vary. If no date is found a null value is returned

(3)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2013-01-17 (first published: )

1,274 reads

Blogs

Distance Metrics for Semantic Similarity Searches in SQL Server 2025

By

Next up in my series talking about The Burrito Bot is diving into the...

The end of an era – why I chose not to renew my MVP

By

Two years ago, two things happened within a few days of each other. I...

PowerShell Strikes Back: A New Script

By

This is it. The final chapter of PowerShell Strikes Back. Over the past four...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Unraveling the Mysteries of the Ephemeral Model: The Fabric Modern Data Platform

By John Miner

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Unraveling the Mysteries of the...

QUOTENAME Behavior

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item QUOTENAME Behavior

Running script without having permission to Function

By Reh23

Good Morning. I have a T-SQL Script which has been developed to execute a...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

QUOTENAME Behavior

I use QUOTENAME() like this in code?

DECLARE @s VARCHAR(20) = 'Steve Jones'
SELECT QUOTENAME(@s, '>')
What is returned?

See possible answers