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Windows IT Pro Magazine May 2004
[Features] Create a User-Defined Data Type SQL Server 2005's user-defined data type (UDT) capability lets you create new multifield scalar data types, such as Latitude and Longitude, and treat them the same way you do built-in multifield scalar data types such as datetime. — Dan Sullivan Developing CLR-Based Stored Procedures See how Common Language Runtime (CLR) stored procedures work and how they fit into the larger scheme of a high-performance database system by walking through a CLR assembly project that captures and encrypts credit card information. — William Vaughn Management Tools: No Secrets In this interview with SQL Server Magazine, Microsoft’s Euan Garden looks at SQL Server 2005’s new and improved management tools, designed to make database-management functions more transparent, more robust, and easier to use. — Editors Message Received SQL Server Service Broker lets internal or external database-related processes send messages to and receive them from each other, providing a valuable way to implement database-oriented middleware and distributed database applications. — William Zack What's New in DTS? Microsoft has rewritten every aspect of Data Transformation Services (DTS) in SQL Server 2005, making it a true extraction, transformation, and loading (ETL) platform and improving performance. Take a whirlwind tour of some of the most important changes. — Kirk Haselden [Editorial] Let XML In XML documents are crucial to many business applications, and to truly be an enterprise-level database platform, SQL Server must be able to not only store XML documents but to query them and combine XML data with relational data. — Michael Otey [Inside SQL Server] Inside SQL Server 2005 Security Rest secure: Yukon addresses some security holes that previous releases left open. Look inside execution context, user-schema separation, and more. — Kalen Delaney [T-SQL Black Belt] Get in the Loop with CTEs Get into the loop! Check out what you can do with Yukon’s new non-recursive and recursive Common Table Expressions. — Itzik Ben-Gan [SELECT TOP(X)] New Whidbey Features Here are seven exciting new features you can look forward to in Visual Studio .NET’s upcoming release, code-named Whidbey. — Michael Otey [Preparing for SQL Server 2005] Off by Default Summary of Yukon's primary security concepts. — Eric Brown |
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