then its probably inserting your blank string into the column.  SQLA  
doesn't want to get too much in the way of the natural "features" of  
the database in use.


On Jul 7, 2008, at 11:09 AM, Kless wrote:

>
> Yes, it's SQLite. I use it into the development.
>
> On Jul 7, 4:06 pm, Michael Bayer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Jul 7, 2008, at 3:10 AM, Kless wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> But I'm supposed that the generation function of autoincrement only
>>> works when the field is NULL or there is an integer, so this fails  
>>> on
>>> fields with a string empty.
>>
>> im not sure offhand what an empty string would produce since I'd have
>> to check what we're doing to detect "no value present".   But I would
>> hope that if the string value went through, it would raise an error  
>> on
>> the DB side (so this impies you might be using SQLite).
> >


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