2012-11-30
2,418 reads
2012-11-30
2,418 reads
Cascading Updates and Deletes, introduced with SQL Server 2000, were such an important, crucial feature that it is hard to imagine providing referential integrity without them. One of the new features in SQL Server 2005 that hasn't gotten a lot of press from what I've read is the new options for the ON DELETE and ON UPDATE clauses: SET NULL and SET DEFAULT. Let's take a look!
2008-08-28
2,984 reads
Some time ago, I loaded a large set of data into one my tables. To speed up the load, I disabled the FOREIGN KEY and CHECK constraints on the table and then re-enabled them after the load was complete. I am now finding that some of the loaded data was referentially invalid. What happened?
2008-07-18
3,000 reads
Use this proc if you need to alter a column that is part of a primery key
2008-02-04 (first published: 2007-12-10)
1,120 reads
Are you considering replatforming your SQL Server workload due to recent vendor changes, but...
By Steve Jones
The greatest rewards come from working on something that nobody has words for. If...
By HeyMo0sh
Working in DevOps, I’ve seen FinOps do amazing things for cloud cost control, but...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The day-to-day pressures of a...
Analysis Services (either the integrated workspace in Power BI or on a SQL Server)...
When thinking about the identity property and sequence objects, which of these can be used with numeric and decimal data types?
See possible answers