There are people on this forum who are extremely generous with their time and talent, none more than Dr Hipp who has created and maintains a first rate piece of software yet is generous enough to provide it free of charge to all those who can find a use for it. Be nice to them and they will make an extraordinary effort to be helpful to you.

By the way Sqlite is a DBMS library for embedded applications, not a language. It uses SQL as its input and incorporates an embedded metalanguage, VDBE, which is the output of the SQL compiler and actually executes the data manipulation.

353455 453455 wrote:
excuse me?. do you really think this is my homework and that i want someone
like him to do it for me?.

i think this is the problem, fear, more than one here has the fear that a
little kid would come from nowhere and take over their jobs. hence they dont
want to teach the little they know about anything to anyone.

on the other hand, the problem might just be that you guys are either brits
or canadians.

enjoy your cup of tea sir.

you are so funny, but i already pictured you hanging out with your "bloody
mates" and it "pissed me off" to see such a big amount of "townies"
laughting at each other while drinking an ale market beer with 1.9% alcohol
concentration.

now if youre canadian youll think im mexican.
if youre british youll think im a "nigger".

thats so right.
how nice sqlite turned out to be. and the users calling it a PROGRAMMING
LANGUAGE when its just an interpreted piece of crap.










On 7/8/06, Martin Jenkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


C.Peachment wrote:

So true. :( I was hoping that when it all goes quiet for him he might
take a moment to take a look at the "getting other people to do your
homework" section...

Martin


> While this is good advice, I fear the content might be too much for our
> impatient petitioner. Learning to crawl before trying to walk or run can
> be a poorly understood fact of life for some novices.
>
> On Sat, 08 Jul 2006 11:23:03 +0100, Martin Jenkins wrote:
>
>> You might find it useful to
>> take a look at http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.htmlbefore
>> asking any more questions. Useful advice in there that you would do
well
>> to digest. ;)
>
>
>
>
>
>




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