March 31, 2005 at 6:32 am
In a function like RIGHT(N'123', 2) which yields '23', what exactly does the N do? I have seen this in several examples and cannot find documentation on it....(can't really search on N in books online :crazy
March 31, 2005 at 6:46 am
N denotes a unicode string, Unicode you can read up in BOL. As a start note the difference (only in DATALENGTH) in the script below.
SELECT
RIGHT(N'123', 2)
, RIGHT('123',2)
, LEN('123')
, LEN(N'123')
, DATALENGTH('123')
, DATALENGTH(N'123')
--
Frank Kalis
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
Webmaster: http://www.insidesql.org/blogs
My blog: http://www.insidesql.org/blogs/frankkalis/[/url]
March 31, 2005 at 7:00 am
Ahhhh....that makes sense now.
Hopefully SP4 will be out of beta soon and the 'problem' with unicode will be completely resolved.
March 31, 2005 at 7:34 am
What problem?
--
Frank Kalis
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
Webmaster: http://www.insidesql.org/blogs
My blog: http://www.insidesql.org/blogs/frankkalis/[/url]
March 31, 2005 at 7:45 am
It's pretty obscure but I was actually having this problem in an application I was working on.... it was giving me a 644 error and I found this article on microsoft's support that said that 'FIX: Error 644 or 8646 may occur during a DELETE or UPDATE against a table that contains a Unicode column with a Latin1_General_BIN collation'. This is fixed in SP4 beta
I changed the datatype to varchar from nvarchar and the problem went away...changed it back to nvarchar and it came back.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/888799
April 1, 2005 at 12:24 am
I wasn't aware of this kb article, you've mentioned. I'll add this to my link library. Thanks!
--
Frank Kalis
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
Webmaster: http://www.insidesql.org/blogs
My blog: http://www.insidesql.org/blogs/frankkalis/[/url]
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