Igor Tandetnik wrote:
> "Ulrich Schöbel"
> wrote in
> message news:4997ddb2.9070...@bmu.office-on-the.net
>> I have a very simple table 'friends' with only one column
>> 'link':
>>
>> create table friends (link text);
>>
>> Lets assume there are 2 rows, 'abc' and
"Ulrich Schöbel"
wrote in
message news:4997ddb2.9070...@bmu.office-on-the.net
> I have a very simple table 'friends' with only one column
> 'link':
>
> create table friends (link text);
>
> Lets assume there are 2 rows, 'abc' and 'def'.
>
> Then there is a Tcl variable
On 15/02/2009 9:15 PM, Ulrich Schöbel wrote:
> John Machin wrote:
>> all I know about Tcl is that I don't want to
>> know any more about Tcl :-)
>
> You should want to ;-)
You should want to be using Python instead of Tcl ;-)
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John Machin wrote:
> On 15/02/2009 8:17 PM, Ulrich Schöbel wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I'm stuck with my problem. Hopefully someone here can help.
>>
>> I have a very simple table 'friends' with only one column
>> 'link':
>>
>> create table friends (link text);
>>
>> Lets assume there are 2 rows,
On 15/02/2009 8:17 PM, Ulrich Schöbel wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm stuck with my problem. Hopefully someone here can help.
>
> I have a very simple table 'friends' with only one column
> 'link':
>
> create table friends (link text);
>
> Lets assume there are 2 rows, 'abc' and 'def'.
>
> Then
Hi all,
I'm stuck with my problem. Hopefully someone here can help.
I have a very simple table 'friends' with only one column
'link':
create table friends (link text);
Lets assume there are 2 rows, 'abc' and 'def'.
Then there is a Tcl variable x containing a string. If $x
starts with either
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