On 12 Jun 2009, at 23:46, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
I don't know if you work for Sun, but if you do, it would be really
good
if Sun made some open-access Suns available for developers to test
their
code, like HP do.
Surely this would only matter for SPARC-related issues (which I don't
Nicolas Williams wrote:
On Sat, Jun 13, 2009 at 01:43:15AM +0100, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
Thank you for your help. The fact you told me I did not need to link
libpthread was crucial to solving this.
I've found that just removing the libpthread from the generated Makefile
solves this.
Tim Bradshaw wrote:
On 12 Jun 2009, at 23:46, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
I don't know if you work for Sun, but if you do, it would be really
good
if Sun made some open-access Suns available for developers to test
their
code, like HP do.
Surely this would only matter for SPARC-related
I'm very sorry if this is a very stupid question. Intuitively, I would
assume that of course, any TEXT or BLOB field may contain
newlines. I'm, however, puzzled about two things (it all refers to the
commandline interface):
- while I can insert values with newlines by using the X'ABCD'
2009/6/13 Florian v. Savigny lor...@fsavigny.de:
I'm very sorry if this is a very stupid question. Intuitively, I would
assume that of course, any TEXT or BLOB field may contain
newlines. I'm, however, puzzled about two things (it all refers to the
commandline interface):
- while I can
On Sat, Jun 13, 2009 at 4:16 PM, Florian v. Savignylor...@fsavigny.de wrote:
I'm very sorry if this is a very stupid question. Intuitively, I would
assume that of course, any TEXT or BLOB field may contain
newlines. I'm, however, puzzled about two things (it all refers to the
commandline
On 13 Jun 2009, at 12:29, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
I believe if Sun make some public access machines available, there
would
be a benefit to Sun, and would hopefully avoid a lot of the GNUisms
one
sees in software. Whether the cost would outweigh the benefit I have
no
idea. There is
Hi everyone,
Is it possible to invoke SQLite functions while INITing a loadable
extension?
I ask because I need to know if the design I've in mind is at all
possible. It needs to issue a very simple select on an already opened
DB and fetch one row of data, which could all be done with
Thanks to both Nino and Simon, for those prompt answers, which
confirmed that my question was indeed stupid. Why inserting newlines
did not work when I tried to insert them I'm not completely sure; I
repeatedly got syntax errors. I reproduced Simon's example now, which
worked fine (and my
Jean-Christophe Deschamps wrote:
Is it possible to invoke SQLite functions while INITing a loadable
extension?
Of course. The extension is expected to do things like registering
custom functions, collations, virtual tables and so on.
I ask because I need to know if the design I've in mind is
Tim Bradshaw wrote:
On 13 Jun 2009, at 12:29, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
I believe if Sun make some public access machines available, there
would
be a benefit to Sun, and would hopefully avoid a lot of the GNUisms
one
sees in software. Whether the cost would outweigh the benefit I have
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Florian v. Savigny wrote:
Which leads me to the motive for my question: parsing the line
output.
Note that the sqlite shell is intended as a useful tool and diagnostic
aid, but it is not intended to be *the* way you access SQLite. There
are also
Dear Roger,
your revelation is rather shocking for me, because my sqlite.el
library took easily one week of work when I wrote it (and has actually
worked very well so far). I was completely aware it is not intended as
the standard way for programs to access an SQLite database, but I had
actually
Dear Igor,
Thank you _so_ much for comforting hat part of the idea I have in mind.
I have another related question and I hope you or some other guru can
point me towards a solution.
I use SQLite from some interpreted script language under XP (yes I
know). Today's PCs are fast enough to
I'm writing an application which involves lots of relations between
tables. Seen from a high level, my application will have to enforce
lots of rules to ensure database integrity. Before I used SQLite I
would have enforced all these rules in my software. But SQLite has
lots of ways to
I am using sqlite3 with ruby and hope I'm not out of place here in ask for
some help on how to stop or reduce injection threats via sql statements made
by a user be it accidental or deliberate.
I want to build a select query from user entered data and then return rows
that match.
e.g. stmt =
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