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Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art

Guttorm Fløistad (eds.)

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Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

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Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-5068-8

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-5069-5

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2007

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

The Concepts of Referentiality and Possibility in the Context of Art

Abdullah Kaygi

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 237-252

Objective Aesthetic Experiences

Peter Mccormick

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 253-265

Bild und Begriff als Gleichnis der Schöpfung. Philosophie der Kunst und Philosophie der Natur im Bildwerk Paul Klees

Reiner Wiehl

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 267-283

Another Go at the Meaning of Music: Koopman, Davies, and the Meanings of « Meaning »

Peter Kivy

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 285-301

Creative Ascent. Creativity through Creataphors

Hans Lenk

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 303-329

Les catégories esthétiques de stimulation

Evanghélos Moutsopoulos

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 331-345

Grandeur et misère de l'homme, thèmes de l'art contemporain

Evanghélos Moutsopoulos

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 347-352

Le fond doré. À propos des

Maria Filomena Molder

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 353-362

Via Esthética. De l'esprit transcendantal à l'esprit de diathèse: l'alternative esthétique

Jacques-Bernard Roumanes

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 363-383

Value, Values and Literature

Ioanna Kuçuradi

So we are coming toward the end of the book, and you are well primed with T-SQL knowledge of what you can achieve within stored procedures and functions. In Chapter 13, we take a look at triggers, and all you have learned with programming T-SQL can also be applied there as well.

Subqueries are one of the most commonly used areas of T-SQL, but common table expressions are also useful, so knowing these areas well will enable you to move forward at a rapid pace. Combine this knowledge with the functionality covered in Chapter 11, especially when working with JOINs, and you should start to see how powerful T-SQL can be at working with time-based data.

One last piece of advice: if a query starts becoming very complex, you may find that it starts performing badly. We don’t look at performance of queries within this book, although we have discussed indexes and how they can help your query perform better. Always take a step back and think, “Would this work better as two queries where the first query creates a subset of data?” Writing the most complex of queries that processes all the data in one pass of the data may not always be the best answer.

Pp. 385-401