you need to set a breakpoint.
hit the continue button in DDD. That will allow execution of the code and allow
the attached program to continue.
It would be better however to run ddd as follows:
ddd sqlite3
Then set a breakpoint. Then run the program inside the ddd that way you can
first set
Hello Ken,
I just realized that sqlite3 is a bash program. When I do ddd sqlite3, it
gives an error. So when I need to load a program, thru GUI interface I load
main.o. But I guess that's not right
What should I do?
Thanks
Uma
Ken [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
you need
--- Yves Goergen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
in a scenario when multiple operations need to be transactionally
synchronised, I have a file that must be deleted when the database
records are added successfully, but the database operations must be
rolled back, if the file cannot be deleted.
I'm
On 9/7/07, Yves Goergen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
in a scenario when multiple operations need to be transactionally
synchronised, I have a file that must be deleted when the database
records are added successfully, but the database operations must be
rolled back, if the file cannot be
On 08.09.2007 21:06 CE(S)T, Joe Wilson wrote:
Are you able to store this file in the database itself as a BLOB?
No, its an input file that I'm processing and saving the results in the
database. When processing and database import are successful, the file
must be deleted so that it won't be
In general, you have to do something like:
- for newly-created files, create them during the transaction. If
the transaction rolls back, delete the file. If the transaction
commits, leave them alone.
- for deleted files, leave them in place. If the transaction
commits, delete the files. If
On 9/7/07, Yves Goergen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm currently using a transaction for this on the database side and
rolling it back if the file cannot be deleted. But what if the file is
gone and then SQLite says it doesn't accept my records? Since we're
inside a transaction, integrity
--- Yves Goergen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 08.09.2007 21:06 CE(S)T, Joe Wilson wrote:
Are you able to store this file in the database itself as a BLOB?
No, its an input file that I'm processing and saving the results in the
database. When processing and database import are successful, the
--- Scott Hess [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- for newly-created files, create them during the transaction. If
the transaction rolls back, delete the file. If the transaction
commits, leave them alone.
- for deleted files, leave them in place. If the transaction
commits, delete the files.
Hi,
In sqlite3_create_function, xFunc func pointer signature does not
allow to have a return value.Any other possible way achieving it
apart from collation?
regards
ragha
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