I think you misunderstood my question.  I simply want to run sqlite3 on
Windows to create a database and use it's other functionality, not call it
from another application.  My question is simply what is the conventional
place to put it on a Windows computer.
Pete



> Message: 10
> Date: Thu, 26 Jan 2012 19:09:35 +0000
> From: Simon Slavin <slav...@bigfraud.org>
> To: General Discussion of SQLite Database <sqlite-users@sqlite.org>
> Subject: Re: [sqlite] sqlite3 on Windows
> Message-ID: <75609007-23a7-4e84-be70-e1222f4c0...@bigfraud.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
>
> On 26 Jan 2012, at 6:49pm, Pete wrote:
>
> > I have been using sqlite on OS X for some time and sqlite3 comes
> > pre-installed.  I'm now looking at running some apps on Windows 7 and I
> > don't think sqlite3 is pre-installed on that platform.  I see there is a
> > precompiled binary available of sqlite3 available for download - what
> > directory should this be installed in?  If you haven't already guessed
> from
> > the question, I'm not vey familiar with WIndows!
>
> The precompiled application called sqlite3.exe on Windows, and sqlite3 on
> the Mac, is a stand-alone application that has no part to play when you are
> running other apps.  It's a command-line program that lets you type SQLite
> commands and, just like every other application that uses SQLite3, has its
> own copy of the SQLite functions.
>
> Each application has its own copy of the SQLite3 functions.  Normally
> they're built into the application itself and require no extra
> installation.  If they come as a separate file that needs your attention
> the app itself should have instructions.
>
> Simon.
>
>
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