Sometime around Thu, Jun 16, 2005 at 12:15:57PM -0600, Kevin Rodgers said:
> Brett Kelly wrote:
> > I'd like to be able to type in a sql query and have it return a 
> resultset in a
> > different buffer (a la Query Analyzer).  Here's what I'm doing now:
> > - Create a new buffer, do M-x sql-ms RET, then enter the relevant 
> connection
> >   information (user, password, server, dbname). This gives me no errors.
> > - Type in my SQL statement (I've tried simple "select" statements, as 
> well as
> >   more complicated "create proc" type stuff)
> > - Highlight the relevant code with the mouse, and choose Send Region 
> from the
> >   SQL menu.
> >
> > Now, if I'm understanding this correctly, I should see the results in 
> a new
> > buffer, but I'm not.
> 
> From the commentary at the top of sql.el excerpted below, I guess that
> you are typing your SQL statement directly into the sql-interactive-mode
> *SQL* buffer.  If you enter them in some other sql-mode buffer, Send
> Region should cause the *SQL* buffer with the results to be displayed
> (see sql-pop-to-buffer-after-send-region).
> 
> ;; This file provides a sql-mode and a sql-interactive-mode.  The
> ;; interactive mode had to provide a command-line history; the other
> ;; mode had to provide "send region/buffer to SQL interpreter"
> ;; functions.
> 
> ;; sql-interactive-mode is used to interact with a SQL interpreter
> ;; process in a SQLi buffer (usually called `*SQL*').  The SQLi buffer
> ;; is created by calling a SQL interpreter-specific entry function.  Do
> ;; *not* call sql-interactive-mode by itself.
> 
> ;; sql-mode can be used to keep editing SQL statements.  The SQL
> ;; statements can be sent to the SQL process in the SQLi buffer.
> 
> -- 
> Kevin Rodgers
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Help-gnu-emacs mailing list
> Help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnu-emacs
> 

Well, I guess that was my core "goal" - to get emacs to behave as much as
possible like Query Analyzer...

I spend probably half of every day writing sql code, just thought it'd be nice
to be able to write/run sql stuff in something other than query analyzer.

Thanks for the help!

-- 
Brett Kelly
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://inkedmn.com:8000
GPG Public Key: http://inkedmn.com:8000/stuff/inkedmn.asc

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