On 05/03/2010 05:21 PM, Steve Olson wrote:
Thanks everyone for the replies. It looks like the map interface could
do the job nicely. Is there some advantage to going another route?
Note that it will not be known at compile time what the data row is
going to look like; it will be obtained from
,
Dave
-Original Message-
From: Donohue, Matt [mailto:mdono...@structure-tech.com]
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2010 2:13 PM
To: users@qpid.apache.org
Subject: RE: Send data row as message using Qpid client
I assume you are using Red Hat Messaging?
If you install the rpm rhm-docs it will install
@qpid.apache.org
Subject: RE: Send data row as message using Qpid client
I assume you are using Red Hat Messaging?
If you install the rpm rhm-docs it will install an examples directory for each
language in /usr/share/doc/rhm-0.5.
Regards,
matt
-Original Message-
From: Steve Olson [mailto:ol
@qpid.apache.org
Subject: Re: Send data row as message using Qpid client
Thanks for the quick reply. I'll check out the link.
Am programming in C/C++.
Regards,
Steve
On May 3, 2010, at May 3, 2010 5:02 PM, Jonathan Robie wrote:
> On 05/03/2010 04:47 PM, Steve Olson wrote:
>> Hello,
On 05/03/2010 05:06 PM, Steve Olson wrote:
Thanks for the quick reply. I'll check out the link.
Am programming in C/C++.
OK, in C++ you use a Variant::Map - a sender adds map entries, then
encodes it into a message. A receiver decodes the message content into a
map, where it can be read by t
Thanks for the quick reply. I'll check out the link.
Am programming in C/C++.
Regards,
Steve
On May 3, 2010, at May 3, 2010 5:02 PM, Jonathan Robie wrote:
On 05/03/2010 04:47 PM, Steve Olson wrote:
Hello,
I'm must getting acquainted with qpid. Have read the AMQP spec
(0-10) and the messa
On 05/03/2010 04:47 PM, Steve Olson wrote:
Hello,
I'm must getting acquainted with qpid. Have read the AMQP spec (0-10)
and the messaging tutorial from red hat. I'm wondering how to
send/receive a message containing one or more data rows from a
database (multiple datatypes) -- the qpid client