Alumna Alice Zhao Writes New Edition of "SQL Pocket Guide" Alice Zhao (MSiA '13) recently celebrated the publication of a new edition of O'Reilly's SQL Pocket Guide. We spoke with her about the ...
I have seen SQL that uses both != and <> for not equal. What is the preferred syntax and why? I like !=, because <> reminds me of Visual Basic.
Should I use != or <> for not equal in T-SQL? - Stack Overflow
In SQL, anything you evaluate / compute with NULL results into UNKNOWN This is why SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyColumn != NULL or SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyColumn <> NULL gives you 0 results.
sql - Not equal <> != operator on NULL - Stack Overflow
Microsoft SQL Server is one of the exceptions: it doesn't support , and requires .
The @CustID means it's a parameter that you will supply a value for later in your code. This is the best way of protecting against SQL injection. Create your query using parameters, rather than concatenating strings and variables. The database engine puts the parameter value into where the placeholder is, and there is zero chance for SQL injection.
The other answers are correct if you're dealing with SQL Server, and it's clear that you are. But since the question title just says SQL, I should mention that there are some forms of SQL such as MySQL where a pound sign is used as an alternative commenting symbol.
What does the SQL # symbol mean and how is it used?
Our numbers have a specific two-letter combination that tells us how the number sounds. For example 9th 3rd 301st What do we call these special sounds?