Insight and analysis on the information technology space from industry thought leaders.
Microsoft Centralizes Online Product Documentation
Microsoft Centralizes their Online Product Documentation and Forums
Microsoft Corporation has now provisioned a new portal for all their application/framework documentation and are also placing the ability to add to that content at your fingertips. The new docs.microsoft.com rolled out recently and provides a jumping-off point for their documentation covering each of the following topic groups arranged by product line/focus:
SQL
Windows
Microsoft Azure
Visual Studio
Office
.NET
ASP.NET
Dynamics 365
Enterprise Mobility + Security
nuget
Xamarin
In addition to meaning you no longer navigate to msdn.microsoft.com the central portal leads to additional functionality and information sharing not offered before. Since we’re all SQL Server Professionals here this is where I’ll take us through the SQL portal for the remainder of the article.
SQL Documentation in One Place
From within the SQL portal you’ve access to new content for the SQL Server platform, including the SQL Server 2017 preview, SQL Server Reporting Services preview, and SQL Server on Linux portal (including all CTPs – community technology previews – as well as the initial release candidate.
Additionally you’re able to explore and create test content and follow hands-on demonstrations for SQL Azure Database, SQL Data Warehouse, and various data science experiments using Azure Machine Learning.
This is also you centralized area for SQL Server downloads for the following (current to the article publication):
SQL Server 2016
SQL Server 2017 Preview
SQL Server Reporting Services
SQL Server Management Studio versions
SQL Server Data Tools
Power Bi Report Server and associated tools
Official sample database for SQL Server: Wide World Importers
Conclusion
The streamlined sourcing of all SQL Server content in one place has been needed for years and scaling this to fit inside the larger pool of technology products from Microsoft is a welcome change. Of course for in-depth, experience-based content covering how-to, breaking news, community updates, and ingenious hacks on how to engineer SQL Server and the rest of the Microsoft Data Platform in ways that benefit you and your customers look no farther than SQL Server Pro.
Read more about:
MicrosoftAbout the Author
You May Also Like