Often when trying to pivot data you wont know what the possible values that you need to pivot on, in this case you can use dynamic SQL.
Lets say we have a table with employee sale counts
Employee
Sales
Gavin
10
Troy
4
Joe
3
We can pivot this data using the standard Pivot syntax like this
The problem is as new employees come into our table this query wont pick them up as we’ve not explicitly named them. We can get round this by using dynamic SQL with the Pivot statement…
The above query will build a dynamic Pivot SQL statement which will get all possible employee values from the EmployeeSales table and pivot on that. With this you can easily customize the query to limit which employees get pivoted on, for example only the top 2 performers…
I've grown up reading Tom Clancy and probably most of you have at least seen Red October, so this book caught my eye when browsing used books for a recent trip. It's a fairly human look at what's involved in sailing on a Trident missile submarine...
Question: Can a 2008 SQL instance be used as the witness for a 2005 database mirroring setup? This question was sent to me via email. My reply follows. Can a 2008 SQL instance be used as the witness for a 2005 database mirroring setup? Databases to be mirrored are currently running on 2005 SQL instances but will be upgraded to 2008 SQL in the near future.
In which Phil illustrates an old trick using STUFF to intert a number of substrings from a table into a string, and explains why the technique might speed up your code...
You may want to read Part 1 , Part 2 , and Part 3 before continuing. This time around I'd like to talk about social networking. We'll start with social networking. Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter are all good examples of using technology to let...
Last week I posted Speaking at Community Events - Time to Raise the Bar?, a first cut at talking about to what degree we should require experience for speakers at events like SQLSaturday as well as when it might be appropriate to add additional focus/limitations on the presentations that are accepted. I've got a few more thoughts on the topic this week, and I look forward to your comments.