Coalescing in Temporal Databases
VLDB '96 Proceedings of the 22th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
On Multisets in Database Systems
WMP '00 Proceedings of the Workshop on Multiset Processing: Multiset Processing, Mathematical, Computer Science, and Molecular Computing Points of View
The development of ordered SQL packages to support data warehousing
Data warehousing and web engineering
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Query languages and data models for database sequences and data streams
VLDB '04 Proceedings of the Thirtieth international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 30
The NESTOR framework: how to handle hierarchical data structures
ECDL'09 Proceedings of the 13th European conference on Research and advanced technology for digital libraries
An extension of SQL to support ordered domains in relational databases
IDEAS'97 Proceedings of the 1997 international conference on International database engineering and applications symposium
Relational languages and data models for continuous queries on sequences and data streams
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS)
Data structure and operations for fuzzy multisets
Transactions on Rough Sets II
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From the Publisher:Get the most from your database applications through clever SQL programming Joe Celko shares his most useful tips and tricks for advanced SQL programming to help the working programmer gain performance and work around system deficiencies. Addressing real problems that people building real applications face, Joe provides new and creative solutions. A noted consultant, lecturer, and columnist for DBMS and Database Programming & Design magazines, Joe uses entertaining anecdotes and "war stories" to provide real-world insight into SQL programming and warn about potential problems. Become an expert programmer This is the first advanced SQL book available that provides a comprehensive presentation of the techniques necessary to help you progress from a casual user of SQL to an expert programmer. Joe uses an informal, conversational writing style to explain why a particular trick works, so the working programmer can apply it directly to his or her own programming needs. Relying primarily on the SQL-89 features that are now supported by commercial RDBMSs, he also includes an extensive discussion of SQL-92, with information on how it's being implemented in current and future database products. The tips and techniques presented here are not product specific, so they allow programmers to maximize any system's performance.