Hello Achim, Friday, June 15, 2007, 3:07:13 AM, you wrote:
AM> Pretty simple. An "A" is different from an "a". This is good old Unix AM> style since 1970 (and probably before). Why do we have ANSI and ASCII? AM> This I know. However, gnubg simply can't be the first program that has had to deal with this. Couldn't the issue be solved by forcing players names to upper case upon importing the file? Although personally I find this issue to be a bit irritating, I am capable of working around it. The reason why I'm bringing this up is because the majority of users aren't as well versed in data manipulation as those of us who have spent our entire careers in the database arena. I have always been an advocate for the end-user and it is difficult to break from tradition. ;-) AM> Take a look at the different backgammon servers. There aren't any two AM> with the same game format. Regarding the stats, take a look at the links AM> below. Regarding the different backgammon servers, I have some thoughts but nothing concrete at this moment. However, I don't believe this to be insurmountable. AM> BTW, there is http://sqlitebrowser.sourceforge.net/ Thanks for the link, I missed that one. AM> Well, sqlite can be connected via odbc. AM> http://www.ch-werner.de/sqliteodbc/ This was one of the first things I looked for prior to my original message. I have been unable to get it to work. In Access, a list of tables does appear but I am presented with an error when trying to attach one. Nothing appears at all in SQL Server. Have you tried this driver? I wonder if anyone else has had success with it. AM> You are heartly invited to provide some code. Unfortunately, C++ is not one of the languages I am fluent in. I would love to be an active participant in this project. Perhaps one day a group will attempt a .NET port. -- Best regards, Chris mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Bug-gnubg mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-gnubg
