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SQL Server 2000 Data Types

From a bit to a huge image and binary storage types, the allocation is supposed to help the user conform to the data required, and help the engine allocate space and processing speed efficiently.

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SQL Server 2000 Data Types

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  1. SQL Server 2000 Data Types SQL Server requires that each variable and column in a table should be defined with respect to the type of data it will store. From a bit to a huge image and binary storage types, the allocation is supposed to help the user conform to the data required, and help the engine allocate space and processing speed efficiently. Built-in data types SQL Server 2000 recognizes the following built in data types: Data Types Description bigint Integer data from -2^63 through 2^63-1 int Integer data from -2^31 through 2^31 - 1 smallint Integer data from -2^15 through 2^15 - 1 tinyint Integer data from 0 through 255

  2. bit Integer data with either a 1 or 0 value decimal Fixed precision and scale numeric data from -10^38 +1 through 10^38 -1 numeric Fixed precision and scale numeric data from -10^38 +1 through 10^38 -1 money Monetary data values from -2^63 through 2^63 - 1 smallmoney Monetary data values from -214,748.3648 through +214,748.3647 float Floating precision number data from -1.79E + 308 through 1.79E + 308 real Floating precision number data from -3.40E + 38 through 3.40E + 38 datetime Date and time data from January 1, 1753, through December 31, 9999, With an accuracy of 3.33 milliseconds

  3. smalldatetime Date and time data from January 1, 1900, through June 6, 2079, with an accuracy of one minute char Fixed-length character data with a maximum length of 8,000 characters varchar Variable-length data with a maximum of 8,000 characters text Variable-length data with a maximum length of 2^31 - 1 characters nchar Fixed-length Unicode data with a maximum length of 4,000 characters nvarchar Variable-length Unicode data with a maximum length of 4,000 characters ntext Variable-length Unicode data with a maximum length of 2^30 - 1 characters

  4. binary Fixed-length binary data with a maximum length of 8,000 bytes varbinary Variable-length binary data with a maximum length of 8,000 bytes image Variable-length binary data with a maximum length of 2^31 - 1 bytes cursor A reference to a cursor sql_variant A data type that stores values of various data types, except text, ntext, timestamp, and sql_variant table A special data type used to store a result set for later processing timestamp A database-wide unique number that gets updated every time a row gets updated uniqueidentifier A globally unique identifier

  5. Bigint, sql_variant, and table are new to SQL Server 2000 User-defined data types You can make user-defined data types too, which sometimes can be more descriptive of the value types held in the object. This may make it easier for the programmer to document and work with the data. These data types are based on the built in types, and can be outfitted with preprogrammed defaults, checks, constraints, etc. . To create a user- defined data type, use sp_addtype datatypename, basedatatype, ‘NULL'/'NOT NULL' How to choose the appropriate data type? SQL Server stores data in data pages that are 8Kb (8192 bytes) in size. The system uses some of that sometimes, the system uses only 8060 bytes are available to that are available to store user's data. Consider the size of a row of data in your tables. If the rows are large, make sure that multiples of the fit conveniently on a data page so that page space is not wasted. This is cut down on disk paging overhead when accessing the data. You want to maximize the number of rows of data which that will fit on a page. This can be accomplished both by splitting the tables, and by choosing the smallest data type which that will accommodate your data. . In you are using integer data, data; consider that the tinyint datatype will accommodate data which that will fit into one byte of storage. So if the

  6. range of all of the data in your field (or variable) is between 0 and 255, use the tinyint datatype. If the range is between -32,768 and 32,767, use the smallint data type. And if you need to store integer data from - 2,147,483,648 through 2,147,483,647, use int data type. Similarly with smallmoney. If smallmoney. if your value range is between -214748.3648 and 214,748.3647, use the smallmoney datatype. Use smalldatetime data type instead of datetime data type, if you need to store the date and time data from January 1, 1900 through June 6, 2079, with accuracy to the minute. Prefer varchar.nvarchar to text/ntext whenever possible because the text and image fields are stored separately, which produces additional paging. And prefer char/varchar to nchar/nvarchar data types because the n types require twice as much storage space. The n types are used primarily for unicode data. Satish Kartan is a webmaster who has been working with SQL Server for the past 20 years. Visit Satish Kartan's blog where he has shared much more on data recovery, SQL etc. For more reading, please visit here: http://satishkartan.kinja.com/

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