The population of SQL Star is 1,100.
Population II stars are the oldest in our Milky Way. Population III stars were the first stars in the Universe, but have yet to be discovered. See related question
Population 1 stars are luminous. They include the Sun and are hot and young stars. These types are usually found in spiral galaxies. Population 2 stars are found in nucleuses of galaxies and globular galaxies. These stars are older and usually cooler than the population 1 ones.
One can find an SQL formatter from: SQL Format, Free Formatter, Poor SQL, T-SQL Tidy, Stack Overflow, SQL Inform, Apex SQL, SQL Parser, Red Gate software, to name a few.
T-SQL is Microsoft's version of the generic SQL langauge to be used with, for example, Microsoft SQL Server.
Population I stars are young and luminous like the Sun. Population II stars consist of globular clusters that are generally much older.
Population II stars are lower in "metals" than population I stars. By metals, astronomers mean anything other than hydrogen and helium.
Population I stars
Population I stars have more metals (heavier elements), and are generally younger, than the Population II stars. It is postulated that there are still older Population III stars, that have even less metals and are even older, but none have been discovered yet.
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ANSI SQL is the American National Standards Institute standardized Structured Query Language. ANSI SQL is the base for several different SQL languages such as T-SQL and PL/SQL. ANSI SQL is used to Create, Alter, and View data stored within a database. For more information about ANSI: http://www.ansi.org/ For more information about SQL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL
Population 1 stars are metal rich stars. See related question.
There is no such thing as SQL Server 2003. Microft released SQL Server 2005 as the next version of SQL Server 2000.