@Simon: Thanks for pointing that out! The difference in the effects of
using single vs. double quotes in the select query is still the same though.
@Richard: Thanks for taking time to explain this to me and for pointing me
to the comment in the source code! I've found another case where, depending
On 4/27/19, Manuel Rigger wrote:
> Thanks for your quick and helpful reply! So if I understood correctly,
> there is no way to ensure that a string is not interpreted as a column in
> an arbitrary expression, right?
String literal is always just a string literal in an arbitrary
expression. Strin
On 27 Apr 2019, at 8:46pm, Manuel Rigger wrote:
> INSERT INTO test(c0, c1) VALUES ("c1", 0);
Technically, SQLite should return an error for that, since you supplied an
entity name "c1" where it wanted an expression. For historical compatibility
reasons, SQLite will accept the "c1" and interpr
Thanks for your quick and helpful reply! So if I understood correctly,
there is no way to ensure that a string is not interpreted as a column in
an arbitrary expression, right? In another example, it was the other way
around and I had to use single quotes rather than double quotes to prevent
the st
On 4/27/19, Manuel Rigger wrote:
>
> when executing the example below, I get "Error: no such column: asdf". This
> behavior is surprising to me, as I would have expected "asdf" to be
> interpreted as a string and not as a column name.
>
> CREATE TABLE test (c0);
> CREATE INDEX index_1 ON test('asd
Hi everyone,
when executing the example below, I get "Error: no such column: asdf". This
behavior is surprising to me, as I would have expected "asdf" to be
interpreted as a string and not as a column name.
CREATE TABLE test (c0);
CREATE INDEX index_1 ON test('asdf');
According to the docs, sing
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