> On Oct 24, 2017, at 8:14 AM, Arno Gramatke wrote:
>
> My first naive approach was to figure out, which commands will result in a
> read and which will result in a write to the db file.
I think you’ll need to assume that any SQLite access can both read and write
the file. So at a high leve
Have you run "PRAGMA integrity_check;" from the command line shell against the
same database and does it return rows or just throw the same exception?
---
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>-Original Message--
On 24 Oct 2017, at 4:03pm, Roberts, Barry (FINTL) wrote:
> Our system would get a list of the rowid problems allowing it to log them and
> inform the user. I am currently testing using the 1.0.105.1 driver, however
> the ExecuteReader() call (above) throws an exception saying the database is
On 24 Oct 2017, at 4:14pm, Arno Gramatke wrote:
> These single files should be placed in the app’s „Documents“ folder, making
> them accessible from other apps or the Files.app when allowed by the user.
> With the single db file from above it was only ever our app to access this
> file and we
Hi all,
in an iOS app we have been storing multiple user „documents“ (hierarchical data
mostly, but some larger blobs (~2MB) as well) in a single data base file, that
was stored in the app’s "Application Support“ folder. That has worked without
problems so far.
Since iOS 11 we would like to gi
Hi,
I asked the following question a few weeks ago, but did not get any responses,
hoping someone may have an idea.
We are currently running System.Data.SQLite.dll 1.0.80.0 and would like to
upgrade to a newer version. However there are a variety of issues we have run
into, most of which I hav
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