Yes, that is possible.1
In T-SQL you can switch between databases or link to a database. To know which databases there are you can run this query:
select name
from sys.databases
The tables are always in the dbo
schema. To determine which tags are common between Stack Overflow, Super User and Server Fault you can run this join over three tables from three databases (Stack Overflow is the currentdb here):
select sot.tagname
from tags sot
inner join superuser.dbo.tags sut
on sut.tagname = sot.tagname
inner join serverfault.dbo.tags sft
on sft.tagname = sot.tagname
Finaly you can do some fancy scripting with dynamic sql and cursors, in this example to get an overview of the number of users per site:
-- all databases
declare db_c cursor for select [name]
from sys.databases
where database_id > 5 -- skip master, temp, model, msdb, Data.SE
declare @db_c_name sysname -- holds name of db after fetch
declare @sql nvarchar(max) -- holds build up sql string
-- result table
create table #all_users ( site nvarchar(250)
, cnt int
);
open db_c
fetch next from db_c into @db_c_name
while(@@FETCH_STATUS = 0)
begin
set @sql = N'use '+ QUOTENAME(@db_c_name) +';
insert into #all_users
select '''+ QUOTENAME(@db_c_name) +''', count(*) from users';
exec (@sql)
fetch next from db_c into @db_c_name
end;
close db_c;
deallocate db_c;
select * from #all_users
You can find the above SQL statements working (as multiple resultsets) in this SEDE query.
Keep in mind that over on Meta Stack Exchange there are a lot more questions and answers about SEDE, including the one that explains that client-side sorting is enabled only for resultsets <= 5000 which is something I just learned...
1. From Tim Stone: (There's also native support for running the same query across multiple sites, but it's not enabled on the public instance)