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hi guys i am new SQL Server ,if any one asked me to explain about SQL Server Architecture then how do i start explaining them? Similary if they ask me about performance tuning how should i explain them .

i know the concepts but i not able to explain them in an order? please any one can help me out in this?

Thanks in Advance

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It sounds like you are trying to mislead your employer into thinking you have more knowledge than you do. – Oliver N. Jun 25 at 18:13
Why not spend a few hours working with a SQL Server Express and get a feel for things from that perspective? What concepts do you know but can't explain in order? Give us something to work with other than you know the term "SQL Server," please. – JB King Jun 25 at 18:16

closed as not a real question by Cade Roux, JB King, David Thornley, Neil Butterworth, Mark Biek Jun 25 at 18:16

5 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

Read a good book on SQL Server.

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vote up 16 vote down

Say "I don't know anything about SQL Server". Honesty is the best policy.

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vote up 3 vote down

These are questions that can only honestly be answered by direct exposure and experience - probably years of each. As another person suggested, you need to start by reading a good book and then begin using SQL Server - a LOT. After a lot of experience you'll be able to naturally answer those questions in an interview.

If someone asks you now, the best answer is a totally honest one - "I'm not really familiar with those concepts, but I'm an eager learner."

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If your new to SQL Server, they will not ask you those questions. Or they will understand if you not answer them perfectly.

But if you first said you know it and want to show it, well, read SQL Server for dummies first, then MSDN.

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vote up 6 vote down

Be honest, say "I am new to SQL Server but am willing to learn more, and this is what I know now....." say what you know. If I asked this question to someone and they tried to give an answer without knowing a lot I would know THAT they don't. Sometimes its about knowing what you know, sometimes its about knowing what you don't know. Don't pretend. You are sunk if you do.

But then, I have only been working with SQL for 12 years, so I have a lot to learn yet. There is always someone better or some new approach to consider.

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