With SQL Server 2016, you can store JSON objects in your rows. Here’s how to work with JSON objects, including how to update them once you’ve found them. In a previous Practical .NET column I showed ...
With SQL Server 2016, it now makes sense to store JSON objects in your database (even though there’s no JSON datatype). Here’s how to query JSON properties to find the rows you want. It’s not unusual ...
In my previous few blogs, I covered the basics of KQL. We covered everything from simple queries on one table to working with multiple tables using joins. Those examples used clean, structured data in ...
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