Showing posts with label similar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label similar. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Diagram Editor in SQL Server Management Studio

Hi,

I was playing with the diagram editor and I was wondering if that was a component available for other developers to use. We're using a similar control for our product, but that control is pretty slow and a little dumb, it displays overlapped tables and doesn't have the "arrange tables" feature that I really like in the Sql Server Management Studio.

So my question is, how could we get this control, is it available for purchase? Any suggestions to similar available controls? Basically, we need a diagram editor in which the objects and the relations are selectable.

Any help would be highly appreciated.

Thanks, Florin

That is a part of client tools to be installed and cannot be seperated as a component.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Determining output schema for a stored procedure

How would I go about retrieving this information without actually executing
the stored proc? Similar I guess to the .NET DataAdapter generation in the
configuration wizard. I've been tasked with scripting some home grown tests
against a rapidly changing set of procs. It was easy determining the parms
to setup for a call but without actually executing the proc I don't see how
to get the output schema...
SQL 2005 SP1/ WinXP SP2
Thanks all....It's not possible, unfortunately. The best things you can do are:
- Make sure to keep output tables CONSISTENT, and not change output format
depending on input arguments. For instance, the following would be a
worst-practice:
IF @.ReturnCounts = 0
BEGIN
SELECT
CustomerId,
CustomerName
FROM Customers
END
ELSE
BEGIN
SELECT
C.CustomerId,
C.CustomerName,
COUNT(*) AS SalesCount
FROM Customers C
JOIN Sales S ON C.CustomerId = S.CustomerId
END
- Document outputs as well as possible, and write unit tests that verify
them. Remember that each stored procedure's inputs and outputs define an
interface, and although there is no enforceable contract, you can enforce an
implied contract via tests.
... By the way, how are you planning to dynamically test? Are you just
looking for exceptions? How will you know if your test is actually
successful?
Adam Machanic
Pro SQL Server 2005, available now
http://www.apress.com/book/bookDisplay.html?bID=457
--
"Tim Greenwood" <tim_greenwood A-T yahoo D-O-T com> wrote in message
news:O%23QpqTwcGHA.1792@.TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
> How would I go about retrieving this information without actually
> executing
> the stored proc? Similar I guess to the .NET DataAdapter generation in
> the
> configuration wizard. I've been tasked with scripting some home grown
> tests
> against a rapidly changing set of procs. It was easy determining the
> parms
> to setup for a call but without actually executing the proc I don't see
> how
> to get the output schema...
> SQL 2005 SP1/ WinXP SP2
> Thanks all....
>

Determining output schema for a stored procedure

How would I go about retrieving this information without actually executing
the stored proc? Similar I guess to the .NET DataAdapter generation in the
configuration wizard. I've been tasked with scripting some home grown tests
against a rapidly changing set of procs. It was easy determining the parms
to setup for a call but without actually executing the proc I don't see how
to get the output schema...
SQL 2005 SP1/ WinXP SP2
Thanks all....It's not possible, unfortunately. The best things you can do are:
- Make sure to keep output tables CONSISTENT, and not change output format
depending on input arguments. For instance, the following would be a
worst-practice:
IF @.ReturnCounts = 0
BEGIN
SELECT
CustomerId,
CustomerName
FROM Customers
END
ELSE
BEGIN
SELECT
C.CustomerId,
C.CustomerName,
COUNT(*) AS SalesCount
FROM Customers C
JOIN Sales S ON C.CustomerId = S.CustomerId
END
- Document outputs as well as possible, and write unit tests that verify
them. Remember that each stored procedure's inputs and outputs define an
interface, and although there is no enforceable contract, you can enforce an
implied contract via tests.
... By the way, how are you planning to dynamically test? Are you just
looking for exceptions? How will you know if your test is actually
successful?
Adam Machanic
Pro SQL Server 2005, available now
http://www.apress.com/book/bookDisplay.html?bID=457
--
"Tim Greenwood" <tim_greenwood A-T yahoo D-O-T com> wrote in message
news:O%23QpqTwcGHA.1792@.TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
> How would I go about retrieving this information without actually
> executing
> the stored proc? Similar I guess to the .NET DataAdapter generation in
> the
> configuration wizard. I've been tasked with scripting some home grown
> tests
> against a rapidly changing set of procs. It was easy determining the
> parms
> to setup for a call but without actually executing the proc I don't see
> how
> to get the output schema...
> SQL 2005 SP1/ WinXP SP2
> Thanks all....
>