Source: Whatare the differences between T-SQL, SQL Server and SQL [duplicate]
SQL is the basic ANSI standard for
accessing data in a relational database. When you see "MSSQL"
it is referring to Microsoft SQL Server, which is the entire database
architecture and not a language. T-SQL is the proprietary form of SQL
used by Microsoft SQL Server. It includes special functions like
cast, convert, date(), etc. that are not part of the ANSI standard.
You will also see things like plSQL,
which is Oracle's version of SQL, and there are others as well (mySQL
has its own version, for example, and Microsoft Access uses Jet SQL.)
It is important to note the the ANSI
standard for SQL has different releases (for example, 92 or 99,
representing the year it was released.). Different database engines
will advertise themselves as "mostly ANSI-92" compliant or
"fully ANSI-99" compliant, etc, and any exceptions will
usually be documented.
So although "SQL is SQL",
every engine uses its own "flavor" of it, and you do have
to do a little reading on the particular platform before you just
dive in.
A further note - the SQL extensions,
like T-SQL, are generally considered full-fledged programming
languages, complete with looping, if/then, case statements, etc. SQL
itself is limited to simply querying and updating data and is not
considered a true programming language.
Wikipedia has a decent article for an
overview here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL
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