On Wednesday, 7 May 2014 at 19:03:34 UTC, Arjan wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 May 2014 at 06:21:10 UTC, Jack wrote:
First off a Disclaimer: I'm a noob and still learning. Please
don't bash me like some forums.
Now to the questions: I'm searching for a quick and easy way to
integrate SQLite3 in my application.
maybe:
https://github.com/buggins/ddbc/wiki ?
I seem to have a problem with that library. Even if the modules
have been imported and the libraries linked and yada yada, it
spews error upon error. Sample code is this:
import std.stdio;
import ddbc.drivers.sqliteddbc;
void main(){
SQLITEDriver driver = new SQLITEDriver();
writeln("SUCCESS");
}
Error spewed out is this:
hello.d|7|Error: undefined identifier SQLITEDriver|
I think Code::Blocks is importing the modules but not detecting
the modules. Been at it for a few hours now. Any help?
On Thursday, 8 May 2014 at 05:57:39 UTC, Jesse Phillips wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 May 2014 at 06:21:10 UTC, Jack wrote:
First off a Disclaimer: I'm a noob and still learning. Please
don't bash me like some forums.
Now to the questions: I'm searching for a quick and easy way to
integrate SQLite3 in my application. I came across the
etc.c.sqlite3 and the DSQLite
library(https://github.com/bioinfornatics/DSQLite).
Thinking that the C bindings is more documented I tried
learning
that. Though I can't understand the arguements of the callback
function.
extern(C) int callback(
void* NotUsedAtAll, // Null variable
int argc, // What?
char** results, // Results?
char** columnNames //Column Names?
){
for(int i = 0; i<argc; i++){
writeln(results);
getchar();
}
I've been reading through many explanations about this and I
understand why the callback is needed but I can't seem to
understand how to really use the callback function. Can someone
provide a brief explanation or just point me in the right
direction?
May as well throw an undocumented library at you:
https://github.com/JesseKPhillips/SQLite3-D
I only used it to pull data out of SQLite database. Once you
have your db object it is something like this.
foreach(data; db.query(statement).range!Structure)...
Where you define a struct with Nullable!() types your statement
pulls out.
Sounds easy enough, I'll take a look at it. Thank you ...