John

John Morehouse is currently a Consultant with Denny Cherry & Associates living in Louisville, Kentucky. With over 2 decades of technical experience in various industries, John now focuses on the Microsoft Data platform and specializes in Microsoft SQL Server. He is honored to be a Microsoft Data Platform MVP, 2016 Idera Ace, Friend of Red Gate since 2015, Sentry One PAC member & Community Ambassador. John has passion around speaking, teaching technical topics and giving back to the technical community. He is a user group leader, SQL Saturday organizer, and former PASS regional mentor. He is also a blogger, avid tweeter, and a frequent speaker at SQL Saturday's as well as other conferences. If you want to find John, you can find him on Twitter (@sqlrus) or on his blog, http://sqlrus.com.

Blog Post

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!! Looking back at my Happy New Year! post from the start of 2020, I of course, didn’t realize the brute force of the global pandemic that...

2021-01-01

6 reads

Blog Post

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!! Looking back at my Happy New Year! post from the start of 2020, I of course, didn’t realize the brute force of the global pandemic that...

2021-01-01

5 reads

Blog Post

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!! Looking back at my Happy New Year! post from the start of 2020, I of course, didn’t realize the brute force of the global pandemic that...

2021-01-01

4 reads

Blog Post

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!! Looking back at my Happy New Year! post from the start of 2020, I of course, didn’t realize the brute force of the global pandemic that...

2021-01-01

6 reads

Blog Post

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!! Looking back at my Happy New Year! post from the start of 2020, I of course, didn’t realize the brute force of the global pandemic that...

2021-01-01

5 reads

Blog Post

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!! Looking back at my Happy New Year! post from the start of 2020, I of course, didn’t realize the brute force of the global pandemic that...

2021-01-01

5 reads

Blog Post

Merry Christmas

Christmas is this week so not a technical post for this week.  Just a simple post wishing you and your family as many blessing as possible (especially in the...

2020-12-25

24 reads

Blog Post

Merry Christmas

Christmas is this week so not a technical post for this week.  Just a simple post wishing you and your family as many blessing as possible (especially in the...

2020-12-25

8 reads

Blog Post

Merry Christmas

Christmas is this week so not a technical post for this week.  Just a simple post wishing you and your family as many blessing as possible (especially in the...

2020-12-25

9 reads

Blog Post

Merry Christmas

Christmas is this week so not a technical post for this week.  Just a simple post wishing you and your family as many blessing as possible (especially in the...

2020-12-25

8 reads

Blogs

Presenting with Visual Studio Code

By

A while back I wrote a quick post on setting up key mappings in...

Advice I Like: In 100 Years

By

In 100 years a lot of what we take to be true now will...

dataMinds Saturday 2026 – Slides

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At Saturday the 21st of February I’m presenting an introduction to dimensional modelling at...

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Forums

connections vs apis

By stan

hi , i hear more and more that we have too many connections to...

is it true we cant debug c# scripts in ssis anymore under vs

By stan

Hi, i'm running vs2022.   I'm trying out a c# script that i'd like to...

Missing the Jaro Winkler Distance

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Missing the Jaro Winkler Distance

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Question of the Day

Missing the Jaro Winkler Distance

I upgraded a SQL Server 2019 instance to SQL Server 2025. I wanted to test the fuzzy string search functions. I run this code:

SELECT JARO_WINKLER_DISTANCE('tim', 'tom')
I get this error message:
Msg 195, Level 15, State 10, Line 1 'JARO_WINKLER_DISTANCE' is not a recognized built-in function name.
What is wrong?

See possible answers