On 9/8/09 22:24 , various people wrote:
Unfortunately, the 3 main families of small computer operating systems
have 3 different definitions of what a text file is...
DOS/Windows (PC): lines are terminated with CR+LF
Unix: lines are terminated with LF
Macintosh: lines are terminated with
reasons.
- Original Message -
From: Jean-Denis Muys jdm...@kleegroup.com
To: General Discussion of SQLite Database sqlite-users@sqlite.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 09, 2009 6:09 AM
Subject: Re: [sqlite] Importing data into SQLite - text files are not
really portable
On 9/8/09 22:24
-
From: Jean-Denis Muys jdm...@kleegroup.com
To: General Discussion of SQLite Database sqlite-users@sqlite.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 09, 2009 6:09 AM
Subject: Re: [sqlite] Importing data into SQLite - text files are not
really portable
On 9/8/09 22:24 , various people wrote
On Tue, 8 Sep 2009, Ribeiro, Glauber wrote:
Unfortunately, the 3 main families of small computer operating systems
have 3 different definitions of what a text file is...
This causes no end of trouble when moving text files between these kinds
of systems.
I've never worked with a Mac so I
Unfortunately, the 3 main families of small computer operating systems
have 3 different definitions of what a text file is...
DOS/Windows (PC): lines are terminated with CR+LF
Unix: lines are terminated with LF
Macintosh: lines are terminated with CR
This causes no end of trouble when moving
Yes, one big, long line.
As for displaying, depending on the program you use, \r may get
displayed as ^M. For example:
$ echo -ne '\r\n' | cat -A
^M$
$ echo -ne '\r\n' | od -An -abcx
cr nl
015 012
\r \n
0a0d
Regards,
- Robert
-Original Message-
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