OK. That change did make inspectdb work, however it wasn't the end of
the story...
# manage.py syncdb
gave me an invalid character error. Fixed that in oracle/base.py
FormatStylePlaceholderCursor with:
def execute(self, query, params=[]):
query = self.convert_arguments(query, len(par
cx_Oracle seems to be DB-API compliant, no need to stuff about with
those pesky oracle data-dictionary views. I did this:
def get_table_description(cursor, table_name):
"should return a DB-API cursor.description alike sequence"
cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM %s WHERE 1=2" %
quote_name(tabl
On 9/11/06, DavidA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ...
> You could try implementing those three functions, using one of the
> other backends as a starting point, but you'll need to be fairly
> familiar with Oracle to get through it, me thinks.
This will help:
http://www.ss64.com/orad_v8/index.html
world_domination_kites wrote:
> ---
> But then, alas:
> ---
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File
> "c:\Python23\Lib\site-packages\Django-
A lazy django newby, first time poster, newly subscribed, wanted a
quick and squeaky-clean admin interface for a legacy Oracle database.
He installed Django 0.95 and PostgreSQL on his windows XP workstation,
did the tutorial, had a bit of a tinker and fell in love. He installed
cx_Oracle, rewrote
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