Hi Greg,

 

J As an aside, for someone starting with T-SQL, the first book that Itzik
had in that series is probably more appropriate:

 

Inside T-SQL: Fundamentals ->
http://www.amazon.com/Microsoft%C2%AE-Server%C2%AE-T-SQL-Fundamentals-PRO-De
veloper/dp/0735626014/ref=sr_1_10?ie=UTF8
<http://www.amazon.com/Microsoft%C2%AE-Server%C2%AE-T-SQL-Fundamentals-PRO-D
eveloper/dp/0735626014/ref=sr_1_10?ie=UTF8&qid=1310714811&sr=8-10>
&qid=1310714811&sr=8-10

 

Regards,

 

Greg

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Greg Keogh
Sent: Friday, 15 July 2011 4:43 PM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: RE: [OT] Renting a data projector

 

Yeah Chris, you would win a handful of Lindt chocky balls which I'm giving
away as prizes for good answers. 3km was a reasonable guess, as most people
think it's a few hundred metres or so.

 

And Ben, my grain of sand I picked up from Mentone beach is 0.700000000000mm
in diameter, and it's a perfect Silicon Dioxide sphere of course.

 

Another question I ask is how many grains of sand are in the jar (PHOTO LINK
<http://www.docuscope.com.au/temp/sand.jpg> ). The book pictured behind the
jar is book 1 of the pair T-SQL Querying and T-SQL Programming. I
accidentally bought book 2 first and found it discussed things like
triggers, performance and rarer topics like spatial data, auditing (by Greg
Low), service broker, etc. A lot of that wasn't of much interest to me as a
pure developer, so I rushed out and bought book 1. I must now report that
the book 1 is very heavy and dense reading with a lot of maths and algorithm
discussions that I guess would be university course level. If you just want
to be a good T-SQL and proc coder then there are probably many books that
are easier to digest. If you're a bit geeky and like full coverage and deep
technical background information then I think the pair of Inside SQL Server
2008 books will tickle your fancy.

 

Cheers,

Greg

 

Reply via email to