2024-11-25
177 reads
2024-11-25
177 reads
An in depth look at the implications of using Banker's Rounding.
2020-06-15
18,567 reads
As SQL developers, we tend to think of performance tuning in terms of crafting the best table indices, avoiding scalar and table valued functions, and analyzing query plans (among other things). But sometimes going back to the spec and applying some properties of elementary math can be the best way to begin to improve performance of SQL queries which implement mathematical formulas. This article is a case study of how I used this technique to optimize my SQL implementation of the Inverse Simpson Index.
2021-05-07 (first published: 2019-09-12)
5,389 reads
How we can use SQL to solve a math problem published in The Guardian...but with a caution about implicit type conversion.
2015-07-14
7,497 reads
3 functions that implement the left (<<), right (>>) and unsigned right (>>>) shift operators, commonly found in C-style languages.
2012-02-15 (first published: 2011-12-30)
8,117 reads
By Steve Jones
AI is a big deal in 2026, and at Redgate, we’re experimenting with how...
By Steve Jones
Another of our values: The facing page has this quote: “We admire people who...
By Ed Elliott
Running tSQLt unit tests is great from Visual Studio but my development workflow...
Hi, We have low latency high volume system. I have a table having 3...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Long Name
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Eight Minutes
I run this code to create a table:
When I check the length, I get these results:
A table name is limited to 128 characters. How does this work?