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

Advice I Like: Respect

By

“Don’t aim to have others like you; aim to have them respect you.” –...

Blue Sky Programming – The Optimism Trap

By

Many years ago, before I joined Oracle, I was working on a major modernisation...

Setting Up a Mac for Data Engineering and AI Work

By

If you work with data pipelines, SQL, notebooks, or machine learning models, a Mac...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

SQL Art, Part 4: Happy 4th of July — A British DBA's Guide to Celebrating a War We Don't Talk About

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL Art, Part 4: Happy...

Alamat kantor BCA KCP Galuh Mas Telp:0817866887

By Layanan_BCA_24jam

WhatsApp:0817-866-887 Area Street Festival, Ruko No 1 & 1A, CBD, Jl. Galuh Mas Raya,...

Is Fabric a Reliable Service or a Ripped Resource?

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Is Fabric a Reliable Service...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

BIT_COUNT I

In SQL Server 2025, I have a table (dbo.UserPermission) that contains this data:

UserID  UserPermissions
15
23
37
What is returned when I run this code:
select bit_count(UserPermissions) as PermissionCount
from dbo.UserPermission
where UserID = 3;

See possible answers