Introduction - If you have any usage issues, please Google them yourself
You can use CRL to author a number of database objects. Follow a canonical example that explains the main steps involved in using and creating a CLR object inside SQL Server 2005.
Packet : 9927420dbobjcode.zip filelist
Code/
Code/Article2/
Code/Article2/Article2.sln
Code/Article2/Article2.suo
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/AssemblyInfo.cs
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/bin/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/bin/Debug/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/bin/Debug/SqlServerTVF.dll
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/bin/Debug/SqlServerTVF.pdb
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/Divisor.cs
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/obj/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/obj/Debug/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/obj/Debug/SqlServerTVF.dll
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/obj/Debug/SqlServerTVF.pdb
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/obj/Debug/TempPE/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/obj/SqlServerTVF.csproj.FileList.txt
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/SqlServerTVF.csproj
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/SqlServerTVF.csproj.user
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/Test Scripts/
Code/Article2/SqlServerTVF/Test Scripts/Test.sql
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