Windows UTF-16 is represented by WCHAR. It is always 2 bytes. UCS-2 can
be 3 or more bytes but these are for extended characters outside the ones
used for real language. For example, musical notation symbols use the
third byte. I don't think any OS's use UCS2 directly. I know Oracle
supports U
I'm assuming UTF-8 support will still be there as well? For Windows
applications, UTF-16 is much more prevalent.
--
Andrew
On Wed, 7 Apr 2004, Christian Smith wrote:
> On Wed, 7 Apr 2004, D. Richard Hipp wrote:
>
> >A design proposal for SQLite version 3.0 can be found at:
> >
> > http://w
SQLite should be used when you are writing applications in which you do
not want the user to even know they are using a database. It is embedded
only and isn't designed with security or concurrency to support a
mutli-user load like PostgreSQL/MySQL/Oracle/Microsoft SQL Server.
Something like Postg
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