Wildcard Characters in MS Access
Wildcard Characters in MS Access
| Symbol | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| * | Represents zero or more characters | bl* finds bl, black, blue, and blob |
| ? | Represents a single character | h?t finds hot, hat, and hit |
| [] | Represents any single character within the brackets | h[oa]t finds hot and hat, but not hit |
| ! | Represents any character not in the brackets | h[!oa]t finds hit, but not hot and hat |
| - | Represents a range of characters | c[a-b]t finds cat and cbt |
| # | Represents any single numeric character | 2#5 finds 205, 215, 225, 235, 245, 255, 265, 275, 285, and 295 |
Here are some examples showing different LIKE operators with '%' and '_' wildcards:
| LIKE Operator | Description |
|---|---|
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE 'a%' | Finds any values that starts with "a" |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE '%a' | Finds any values that ends with "a" |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE '%or%' | Finds any values that have "or" in any position |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE '_r%' | Finds any values that have "r" in the second position |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE 'a__%' | Finds any values that starts with "a" and are at least 3 characters in length |
| WHERE ContactName LIKE 'a%o' | Finds any values that starts with "a" and ends with "o" |
Wildcard Characters in SQL Server
Wildcard Characters in SQL Server
| Symbol | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| % | Represents zero or more characters | bl% finds bl, black, blue, and blob |
| _ | Represents a single character | h_t finds hot, hat, and hit |
| [] | Represents any single character within the brackets | h[oa]t finds hot and hat, but not hit |
| ^ | Represents any character not in the brackets | h[^oa]t finds hit, but not hot and hat |
| - | Represents a range of characters | c[a-b]t finds cat and cbt |
Here are some examples showing different LIKE operators with '%' and '_' wildcards:
| LIKE Operator | Description |
|---|---|
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE 'a%' | Finds any values that starts with "a" |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE '%a' | Finds any values that ends with "a" |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE '%or%' | Finds any values that have "or" in any position |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE '_r%' | Finds any values that have "r" in the second position |
| WHERE CustomerName LIKE 'a__%' | Finds any values that starts with "a" and are at least 3 characters in length |
| WHERE ContactName LIKE 'a%o' | Finds any values that starts with "a" and ends with "o" |
How to View SQL Server Database Size and File Locations
How to View SQL Server Database Size and File Locations
SELECT
--database ID
mdf.database_id,
--database name
mdf.name,
--database file location
mdf.physical_name as data_file,
ldf.physical_name as log_file,
db_size_MB = CAST((mdf.size * 8.0)/1024 AS DECIMAL(8,2)),
log_size = CAST((ldf.size * 8.0 / 1024) AS DECIMAL(8,2))
FROM (SELECT * FROM sys.master_files WHERE type_desc = 'ROWS' ) mdf
JOIN (SELECT * FROM sys.master_files WHERE type_desc = 'LOG' ) ldf
ON mdf.database_id = ldf.database_id
--sort DESC or ASC
order by db_size_MB DESC





