Re: MySQL Books

2004-11-23 Thread Ugo Bellavance
Kieran Kelleher wrote:
This is my favorite advanced MySQL book. It's by Jeremy Zawodny (looks  
after MySQL installations for Yahoo.com) (fix the link if it wordwraps  
in this email):
http://www.amazon.com:80/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596003064/kieranwebobje-20? 
creative=327641camp=14573link_code=as1

-Kieran
I have mysql from Paul Duboir, 2nd ed here.  Very complete.  However, I 
like high performance mysql more because it is close to what I do - 
sysadmin/dba.  I also read MySQL enterprise solutions.  Good, but I 
like the two others more.

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Re: MySQL Books

2004-11-23 Thread Jonathan Duncan
Very good feedback on multiple books.  Thank you.  So many good choices.
 If only I had time to read them all...

Jonathan
 
 
Ugo Bellavance [EMAIL PROTECTED] 11/23/04 7:46 am  
Kieran Kelleher wrote: 
This is my favorite advanced MySQL book. It's by Jeremy Zawodny (looks 

after MySQL installations for Yahoo.com) (fix the link if it wordwraps 

in this email): 
http://www.amazon.com:80/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596003064/kieranwebobje-20? 
creative=327641camp=14573link_code=as1 
 
-Kieran 
 
I have mysql from Paul Duboir, 2nd ed here.  Very complete.  However, I 
like high performance mysql more because it is close to what I do - 
sysadmin/dba.  I also read MySQL enterprise solutions.  Good, but I 
like the two others more. 
 
 
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Re: MySQL Books

2004-11-22 Thread Jonathan Duncan
Sasha,

Plugs from authors are interesting, but plugs from readers are what
really sell a book.  I will check it out though.  Thank you for the
response.

Jonathan
 
 
Sasha Pachev [EMAIL PROTECTED] 11/19/04 5:36 pm  
Jonathan Duncan wrote: 
I have the MySQL first edition book by Paul.  Still a great reference. 
However, it being a bit outdated I was hoping to get a more current
book 
and one with more examples, since I learn best by example.  The first 
book has  good examples, but more would still help. 
 
Therefore, I was comparing reviews online for the following two books: 
-MySQL, Second Edition by Paul DuBois 
-Mastering MySQL 4 by Ian Gilfillan 
 
Any preferences between these two?  Any better suggestions for learning

MySQL front and back from a DBA perspective to an end user perspective?

 
Jonathan: 
 
May I offer a shameless plug? MySQL Enterprise Solutions. Being the
first book 
I've ever written, it does have its weaknesses, but also has its
strengths. For 
every configuration variable in Chapter 14, and for every status
variable in 
Chapter 15 I went to the source to make sure I understood what was going
on 
behind the scenes before I wrote the description. It is also the only
book that 
I know of so far that discusses MySQL internals (I am working on another
one 
dedicated solely to MySQL Internals). 
 
It was written in 2002, so it does focus on 3.23-4.0. However, this is
not that 
big of a minus. Due to the strong commitment of the MySQL team to
backwards 
compatibility, most if not almost everything the book says applies to
4.1 and 
5.0. It is just that the newer versions have some new features and
options that 
the book does not cover. 
 
 
-- 
Sasha Pachev 
Create online surveys at http://www.surveyz.com/ 
 
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Re: MySQL Books

2004-11-22 Thread Kieran Kelleher
This is my favorite advanced MySQL book. It's by Jeremy Zawodny (looks  
after MySQL installations for Yahoo.com) (fix the link if it wordwraps  
in this email):
http://www.amazon.com:80/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596003064/kieranwebobje-20? 
creative=327641camp=14573link_code=as1

-Kieran

Dev Config = OS X 10.3.5 / Java 1.4.2_05 /  WO 5.2.3 / XCode v1.5 /  
MySQL 4.0.20 / Connector-J 3.0.11
Deploy Config = OS X 10.3.5 Server / Java 1.4.2_05 / WO 5.2.3 / MySQL  
4.0.20 / Connector-J 3.0.11
My Blog: http://mysqlwithwebobjects.webhop.org/


On Nov 22, 2004, at 7:34 PM, Jonathan Duncan wrote:
Sasha,
Plugs from authors are interesting, but plugs from readers are what
really sell a book.  I will check it out though.  Thank you for the
response.
Jonathan

Sasha Pachev [EMAIL PROTECTED] 11/19/04 5:36 pm 
Jonathan Duncan wrote:
I have the MySQL first edition book by Paul.  Still a great reference.
However, it being a bit outdated I was hoping to get a more current
book
and one with more examples, since I learn best by example.  The first
book has  good examples, but more would still help.
Therefore, I was comparing reviews online for the following two books:
-MySQL, Second Edition by Paul DuBois
-Mastering MySQL 4 by Ian Gilfillan
Any preferences between these two?  Any better suggestions for  
learning

MySQL front and back from a DBA perspective to an end user  
perspective?

Jonathan:
May I offer a shameless plug? MySQL Enterprise Solutions. Being the
first book
I've ever written, it does have its weaknesses, but also has its
strengths. For
every configuration variable in Chapter 14, and for every status
variable in
Chapter 15 I went to the source to make sure I understood what was  
going
on
behind the scenes before I wrote the description. It is also the only
book that
I know of so far that discusses MySQL internals (I am working on  
another
one
dedicated solely to MySQL Internals).

It was written in 2002, so it does focus on 3.23-4.0. However, this is
not that
big of a minus. Due to the strong commitment of the MySQL team to
backwards
compatibility, most if not almost everything the book says applies to
4.1 and
5.0. It is just that the newer versions have some new features and
options that
the book does not cover.
--
Sasha Pachev
Create online surveys at http://www.surveyz.com/
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MySQL Books

2004-11-19 Thread Jonathan Duncan
I have the MySQL first edition book by Paul.  Still a great reference. 
However, it being a bit outdated I was hoping to get a more current book
and one with more examples, since I learn best by example.  The first
book has  good examples, but more would still help.

Therefore, I was comparing reviews online for the following two books:
-MySQL, Second Edition by Paul DuBois
-Mastering MySQL 4 by Ian Gilfillan

Any preferences between these two?  Any better suggestions for learning
MySQL front and back from a DBA perspective to an end user perspective?

Thanks,
Jonathan Duncan

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Re: MySQL Books

2004-11-19 Thread Sasha Pachev
Jonathan Duncan wrote:
I have the MySQL first edition book by Paul.  Still a great reference. 
However, it being a bit outdated I was hoping to get a more current book
and one with more examples, since I learn best by example.  The first
book has  good examples, but more would still help.

Therefore, I was comparing reviews online for the following two books:
-MySQL, Second Edition by Paul DuBois
-Mastering MySQL 4 by Ian Gilfillan
Any preferences between these two?  Any better suggestions for learning
MySQL front and back from a DBA perspective to an end user perspective?
Jonathan:
May I offer a shameless plug? MySQL Enterprise Solutions. Being the first book 
I've ever written, it does have its weaknesses, but also has its strengths. For 
every configuration variable in Chapter 14, and for every status variable in 
Chapter 15 I went to the source to make sure I understood what was going on 
behind the scenes before I wrote the description. It is also the only book that 
I know of so far that discusses MySQL internals (I am working on another one 
dedicated solely to MySQL Internals).

It was written in 2002, so it does focus on 3.23-4.0. However, this is not that 
big of a minus. Due to the strong commitment of the MySQL team to backwards 
compatibility, most if not almost everything the book says applies to 4.1 and 
5.0. It is just that the newer versions have some new features and options that 
the book does not cover.

--
Sasha Pachev
Create online surveys at http://www.surveyz.com/
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Re: Recommendation on god MySQL books

2004-06-18 Thread Lou Olsten
I really like the Certification Study Guide we just ordered last week.
Great info that I'd wish I had when I started.  I have no plans to take the
test, but I love the way the info is presented and the questions at the end
help ensure I got it.

Lou
- Original Message - 
From: Bartis, Robert M (Bob) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 1:44 PM
Subject: Recommendation on god MySQL books


 I'm looking for suggestions on books that would help me to improve my
understanding of MySQL operations, admin operations, replication etc. I'm
new to MySQL and am about to embark on supporting a database for my team to
use in recording test results. Any suggestions and recommendations ones to
stay away from?

 Thanks in advance
 Bob

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Recommendation on god MySQL books

2004-06-17 Thread Bartis, Robert M (Bob)
I'm looking for suggestions on books that would help me to improve my understanding of 
MySQL operations, admin operations, replication etc. I'm new to MySQL and am about to 
embark on supporting a database for my team to use in recording test results. Any 
suggestions and recommendations ones to stay away from?

Thanks in advance
Bob

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RE: Recommendation on god MySQL books

2004-06-17 Thread Chinchilla Zúñiga, Guillermo
I think Wiley´s Mysql enterprise solutions could be a good option. It´s a great book 
and have an entire chapter covering replication


-Mensaje original-
De: Bartis, Robert M (Bob) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Enviado el: Jueves, 17 de Junio de 2004 11:44 a.m.
Para: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Asunto: Recommendation on god MySQL books

I'm looking for suggestions on books that would help me to improve my understanding of 
MySQL operations, admin operations, replication etc. I'm new to MySQL and am about to 
embark on supporting a database for my team to use in recording test results. Any 
suggestions and recommendations ones to stay away from?

Thanks in advance
Bob

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Re: Recommendation on god MySQL books

2004-06-17 Thread David Griffiths
God doesn't use MySQL (I think he leans towards Postgres - he needs 
views and triggers).

But if you are interested in MySQL, Paul DuBois's book, MySQL, Second 
Edition is a great reference. If you need more insight into performance 
tuning, then Jeremy Zawodny and Derek Balling's book, High Performance 
MySQL, can be very helpful.

Both are up to date.
David
Bartis, Robert M (Bob) wrote:
I'm looking for suggestions on books that would help me to improve my understanding of 
MySQL operations, admin operations, replication etc. I'm new to MySQL and am about to 
embark on supporting a database for my team to use in recording test results. Any 
suggestions and recommendations ones to stay away from?
Thanks in advance
Bob
 


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Re: Recommendation on god MySQL books

2004-06-17 Thread Brent Baisley
When I first started, I bought MySQL by Paul DuBois. It covers the 
basics to admin responsibilities and preventive maintenance.
But, you may want to search the archives, this question has been asked 
many times before.

On Jun 17, 2004, at 1:44 PM, Bartis, Robert M (Bob) wrote:
I'm looking for suggestions on books that would help me to improve my 
understanding of MySQL operations, admin operations, replication etc. 
I'm new to MySQL and am about to embark on supporting a database for 
my team to use in recording test results. Any suggestions and 
recommendations ones to stay away from?

Thanks in advance
Bob
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Re: Recommendation on god MySQL books

2004-06-17 Thread Kieran Kelleher
Get the recently published book from Jeremy Zawodny. It's excellent. 
Very easy to understand and goes through all the admin stuff. It has a 
chapter dedicated to replication and explains in simple concise steps 
how to set up replication. It demonstrates many different types of 
replication configurations from simple master-slave to 
multi-master/multi-slave configurations. It also has excellent material 
on backup strategies and much more.

The book is called High Performance MySQL and published by O'Reilly 
. really great book. I bought mine on Amazon. It is aimed at 
intermediate to advanced users. Read the Amazon comments and feedback 
for more details.

-Kieran

Config = OS X 10.3.4 / Java 1.4.2 /  WO 5.2.3 / XCode v1.2 / MySQL 
4.0.20 / Connector-J 3.0.11
Blog: http://webobjects.webhop.org/

On Jun 17, 2004, at 1:44 PM, Bartis, Robert M (Bob) wrote:
I'm looking for suggestions on books that would help me to improve my 
understanding of MySQL operations, admin operations, replication etc. 
I'm new to MySQL and am about to embark on supporting a database for 
my team to use in recording test results. Any suggestions and 
recommendations ones to stay away from?

Thanks in advance
Bob
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newbie stuff: good mysql books?

2002-11-13 Thread Will K.
Greets Folks,

I have been wanting to get into data driven sites for the longest time, and 
I can do some immediate level work in them using perl, but my understanding 
is still not comprehensive enough for whatever it is I want to do 
(subconsciously).

I sense there is some need to pursue database design better, and an overall 
book on system's design might be good too.  I've read MySQL and Perl for the 
Web by Paul, and Programming with CGI.pm, and both helped a lot.  But there 
is some sort of a want to work specifically with the database more, 
especially design for largescale systems development, and I am just 
wondering what books might be good for this purpose?

PLMK,
Thanks,

Will


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Re: MySQL books

2001-03-28 Thread Lindsay Adams

The O'Reilly MySQL  msql book is not bad, but then I bought Paul DuBois'
book, and now I only use the command reference at the back of the O'Reilly
book for quick lookups. I like the way it is layed out. Every other question
relating to MySQL has been answered by Paul's book.

On 3/28/01 1:28 PM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Speaking of books on MySQL are there more than one to choose from?
 
 If so is MySQL written by Paul DuBois the best one?
 
 John Jackson
 Direct Access Recruiters
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 -Original Message-
 From: B. van Ouwerkerk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 5:03 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Betr.: Hello
 
 ...And.. a book called MySQL written by Paul DuBois. It's a great book and
 will help you to get things up and running within a very short time..
 
 It will cost you another 2-3 days (based on 8 hours per day) to work your
 way through the book and all the examples.. but you will know most of the
 basics..
 
 Bye,
 
 
 B.
 
 
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RE: MySQL books

2001-03-28 Thread jjdirect

I was at the store tonight. Did not see an O'Reilly book but believe I saw
the book by Paul DuBois. There was also a book, one of the Teach Yourself
(MySQL) in 21 Days, series.

Anybody familiar with that one?

John Jackson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-Original Message-
From: Lindsay Adams [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 7:29 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: MySQL books


The O'Reilly MySQL  msql book is not bad, but then I bought Paul DuBois'
book, and now I only use the command reference at the back of the O'Reilly
book for quick lookups. I like the way it is layed out. Every other question
relating to MySQL has been answered by Paul's book.



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Re: MySQL books

2001-03-28 Thread Yann Larrivée

I got the PaulDubois book , but i made a mistake i bought the transaltion in
french. An advice to all others who are thinking of buying it in french if
you can buy it in englis ,

Yann

- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Lindsay Adams" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 11:22 PM
Subject: RE: MySQL books


 I was at the store tonight. Did not see an O'Reilly book but believe I saw
 the book by Paul DuBois. There was also a book, one of the Teach Yourself
 (MySQL) in 21 Days, series.

 Anybody familiar with that one?

 John Jackson
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 -Original Message-
 From: Lindsay Adams [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 7:29 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: MySQL books


 The O'Reilly MySQL  msql book is not bad, but then I bought Paul DuBois'
 book, and now I only use the command reference at the back of the O'Reilly
 book for quick lookups. I like the way it is layed out. Every other
question
 relating to MySQL has been answered by Paul's book.



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RE: MySQL books

2001-03-28 Thread B. van Ouwerkerk


I was at the store tonight. Did not see an O'Reilly book but believe I saw
the book by Paul DuBois. There was also a book, one of the Teach Yourself
(MySQL) in 21 Days, series.

Anybody familiar with that one?

I would go for Paul's book (he should pay me for everytime I refer to his 
book :)) If you're starting with MySQL his book is great, explains how to 
connect with MySQL from C, Perl and PHP.
Wouldn't miss the O'Reilly book though.

I'm not familiar with the Teach Yourself MySQL book. Paul's book took me 2 
days..

Bye,


B.


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