It was my understanding that any version of SQLite is written using the C programming language which happens to be a procedural language (as in not OOP) so I'm not sure why OOP is even part of the discussion.
Or maybe I just need to be educated further. :-) Greg Moore thewatchful...@gmail.com On Feb 22, 2013, at 3:35 PM, Didier Morandi <didier.mora...@gmail.com> wrote: > Ladies and Gentlemen, > > As far as I understood, SQLite 3 only understands PDO (as I'm > implementing a program in PHP.) This is why I talked about OOP. I > thought everyone knew that OOP means Object Oriented Programming and > PDO is the OOP way of programming with PHP. > Anyway, I do not wish to spam this list with my considerations on all this. > Sorry for the noise, good bye and thank you for all the fish. > D. > > 2013/2/22 Petite Abeille <petite.abei...@gmail.com>: >> >> You seem to be missing the point entirely. No one mentioned anything about >> OOP at all, whatever that is. Merely that you may be better off using a more >> contemporary version of SQLite. That's all. > > 2013/2/22 Tim Streater <t...@clothears.org.uk>: > you don't need to do anything OOP in PHP in order to use SQLite. I do > a bit of OOP here and there but by and large not. > _______________________________________________ > sqlite-users mailing list > sqlite-users@sqlite.org > http://sqlite.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users _______________________________________________ sqlite-users mailing list sqlite-users@sqlite.org http://sqlite.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users