Procedures are a large part of the appeal of this book; value tables and Transact-SQL syntax documentation contribute the rest. A typical value table lists all standard database roles, along with commentary on what sort of user is appropriate for each role. Transact-SQL documentation includes generic "all available options" statements of syntax, followed by usage examples. Deeper explanations of what each option does would make the syntax documentation stronger, but what's here is certainly enough to jog readers' memories and point them to heavier reference material, if they need it. Keep this book handy if your job requires you to hop from DBMS to DBMS. --David Wall
Topics covered:
- Installing and configuring Microsoft SQL Server 2000
- Creating databases
- Controlling access to databases
- Manipulating database contents with Transact-SQL
- Backup, recovery, and performance tuning
- Data Transformation Services (DTS)