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Cal --
...and then Cal Evans said...
%
% TjL,
%
% To start with:
Thanks for the titles!
...
% Work your way through both books in a couple of months and then spend every
% waking hour organizing data into tables for a couple of years and you'll
On 22/6/02 at 17:05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Timothy J. Luoma) wrote:
> I've looked through Google and the MySQL website without luck.
>
> I'm looking to find a place which discusses the theory of how one
> should
> create a database, how to organize the information, etc.
>
> There's got to be a g
I haven't tried it, yet, but this looks like an interesting alternative for
a "try-before-you-buy" method of selecting books:
http://safari.informit.com/mainhom.asp?home
You can subscribe to a list of books monthly and have full access to them
online. If you take a look at this, I would recommen
TjL,
To start with:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0764507370/qid=1024783081/sr=8-1/ref=
sr_8_1/104-4398960-1440757
If the title bothers you, take a Sharipe, cross out "Dummies" and write
"Managers", no one will ever know. :)
This book gives an excellent primer in theory and normalizati
For theory and history, I found the manual to be an excellent place to start...
http://www.mysql.com/manual.php
and have a walk through the tutorial starting with:
http://www.mysql.com/doc/C/o/Connecting-disconnecting.html
At 05:05 PM Saturday, 6/22/2002, Timothy J. Luoma wrote -=>
>I've lo
Hi
Not sure about sites but try searching for 'database normalisation tutorial'
I found
http://www.codelearn.com/rdb/rdbd_nt1_s.html
which looks to be a reasonable start.
Peter
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Excellence in internet and open source software
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