| bio | website | linkedin.com/in/nchammas |
|---|---|---|
| location | Gwangju, South Korea | |
| age | 26 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 8 months |
| seen | May 13 at 9:29 | |
| stats | profile views | 14 |
Notable posts:
- Debunking a persistent SQL Server myth about
TRUNCATE. - Debunking another SQL Server myth about variable declarations causing proc recompiles.
- Understanding how certain SQL Server functions dynamically cast their output.
- Using a recursive CTE to find the first ancestor in a hierarchy to satisfy certain conditions.
I am a Database Developer and Administrator. My specialty is database design and development, and in my spare time at work I like to develop highly specialized visualizations (generally using Processing).
|
Oct 3 |
awarded | Notable Question |
|
Sep 1 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
May 10 |
comment |
“Warm” is to “warmth” as “cool” is to what? @ChrisS - There warmth is being used in the emotional sense, not the physical, which explains the difference. |
|
Apr 28 |
awarded | Critic |
|
Feb 19 |
awarded | Good Question |
|
Feb 18 |
awarded | Popular Question |
|
Feb 17 |
awarded | Scholar |
|
Feb 17 |
accepted | You quench your thirst. What do you do with your hunger? |
|
Feb 17 |
awarded | Nice Question |
|
Feb 17 |
comment |
You quench your thirst. What do you do with your hunger? jwpat7, I meant equivalent in the sense that you just presented, though I can see that satisfy is more commonly used. |
|
Feb 16 |
awarded | Student |
|
Feb 16 |
comment |
You quench your thirst. What do you do with your hunger? Would you say "satisfy" is better suited to hunger than it is to thirst? |
|
Feb 16 |
asked | You quench your thirst. What do you do with your hunger? |
|
Nov 7 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Sep 2 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Sep 2 |
awarded | Quorum |