An Introduction to Database Design
An introduction to database design for those people that might not understand what is involved.
2013-01-11 (first published: 2011-01-18)
28,141 reads
An introduction to database design for those people that might not understand what is involved.
2013-01-11 (first published: 2011-01-18)
28,141 reads
The second of a series by Paul White examining the APPLY operator. In this section learn how this operator compares with joins and about both the cross and outer options.
2012-01-13 (first published: 2010-04-19)
28,998 reads
The first of a two-part series of articles examining the APPLY operator. Learn the basics of how this operator works and how it can help you solve some tricky problems.
2012-01-06 (first published: 2010-04-12)
51,618 reads
2012-01-03
2,543 reads
2011-11-01
1,954 reads
2011-10-27
2,281 reads
2011-09-20
2,382 reads
2011-09-08
2,482 reads
2011-09-01
2,632 reads
2011-08-24
2,774 reads
By Steve Jones
In a previous post, I deployed a model to a database using SQL Compare...
By SQLPals
Reality (And Limits) of Instant File Initialization for Transaction Logs in SQL Server 2022 ...
By Steve Jones
Last week I spent a few days in Cambridge, UK for the Redgate Company...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Adding and Dropping Columns II
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Leveraging DuckDB for OLAP Workloads:...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item More Documentation is Needed
I have this table in my SQL Server 2022 database:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[CityList] ( [CityNameID] [int] NOT NULL IDENTITY(1, 1), [CityName] [varchar] (30) , [Country2] [char] (3), [stateprovince2] [char] (2), [Country] [char] (3), [stateprovince] [char] ) ON [PRIMARY] GOI decide to drop the stateprovince2 and country2 columns. What code should I use? See possible answers