On Dec 11, 2016, at 4:57 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
> I agree with most of your changes. But I wonder about moving the
> QUOTE2 (the '[' character) value from code 0xba over to 0xad.
> According to EBCDIC chart at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBCDIC the
> '[' character should be
Here's a patch, against the current Fossil repository, including some changes
we've made to lemon.c in Wireshark, that gets rid of old-style K function
definitions/declarations, and also removes trailing white space from some lines
(the Wireshark pre-commit hook complains about them):
If you use the version of lemon.c and lempar.c in the Fossil repository for
SQLite as of 2017-04-16 20:54:23 UTC, take the following Lemon parser, compile
it, and run it, it fails with
Assertion failed: (yyruleno!=116), function yy_reduce, file
mate_grammar.c, line 2165.
(It's a
On Apr 13, 2017, at 2:36 AM, Dominique Devienne <ddevie...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 6:18 AM, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>
>> Here's a patch, against the current Fossil repository, including some
>> changes we've made to lemon.c in W
On Apr 14, 2017, at 3:59 AM, Richard Damon wrote:
> In C (as opposed to C++), it is the only way to provide a real prototype for
> such a function. The empty parameter list means with an unspecified parameter
> list in C.
Exactly. Perhaps some future C standard will
On Sep 26, 2017, at 8:22 AM, Jens Alfke wrote:
> The basic error code is SQLITE_IOERR, which just means "Some kind of disk I/O
> error occurred” according to the comment. Which is true in this case; an I/O
> operation returned an error.
But the *disk* didn't - the
On Sep 26, 2017, at 1:05 PM, Simon Slavin <slav...@bigfraud.org> wrote:
> On 26 Sep 2017, at 8:47pm, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>
>> On Sep 26, 2017, at 8:22 AM, Jens Alfke <j...@mooseyard.com> wrote:
>>
>>> The basic error code is SQLI
On Sep 26, 2017, at 2:08 PM, Scott Robison wrote:
> There are physical errors and there are logical errors. If an error is
> generated from write, it's not unreasonable to classify it as an
> "output error". From read as an "input error".
"Output error", yes, although
On Sep 26, 2017, at 3:11 PM, Simon Slavin <slav...@bigfraud.org> wrote:
> On 26 Sep 2017, at 10:53pm, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>>
>> I *would* suggests an additional API to get a *separate* extended error
>> code, so that if, for example, a write()
On Sep 26, 2017, at 1:37 PM, Jens Alfke <j...@mooseyard.com> wrote:
>> On Sep 26, 2017, at 1:17 PM, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>>
>> A user wouldn't know what to do with "you've exceeded your stored data
>> quota”?
>
> A Turkish o
On Sep 26, 2017, at 1:43 PM, Simon Slavin <slav...@bigfraud.org> wrote:
> On 26 Sep 2017, at 9:17pm, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>
>> The *number* might annoy the support staff; right off the top of your head,
>> what's the error number for "file s
On Sep 26, 2017, at 2:16 PM, Simon Slavin <slav...@bigfraud.org> wrote:
> On 26 Sep 2017, at 9:57pm, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>
>> On Sep 26, 2017, at 1:37 PM, Jens Alfke <j...@mooseyard.com> wrote:
>>
>>>> On Sep 26, 2017,
On Sep 26, 2017, at 2:22 PM, Jens Alfke <j...@mooseyard.com> wrote:
>> On Sep 26, 2017, at 1:57 PM, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>>
>> Which means "for stuff that would be shown to the user, for the user to
>> read, either localize your erro
On Sep 27, 2017, at 6:58 AM, Keith Medcalf wrote:
> Well, the terminology is correct. These *ARE* I/O Errors. The system
> attempted I/O. It failed. Hence the term I/O Error.
Just don't call it a "disk I/O error".
> It is irrelevant whether the error was caused
On Sep 27, 2017, at 10:00 AM, Keith Medcalf <kmedc...@dessus.com> wrote:
> On Wednesday, 27 September, 2017 10:39, Guy Harris <g...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>
>> On Sep 27, 2017, at 6:58 AM, Keith Medcalf <kmedc...@dessus.com> wrote:
>
>>> Well, the termi
On Dec 4, 2017, at 3:42 PM, Keith Medcalf wrote:
> On Monday, 4 December, 2017 15:44, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
>>> If one object is using, for example, the multithreaded runtime and
>>> the others are using the single threaded runtime (for example), and
>>>
On Jun 18, 2018, at 3:21 AM, x wrote:
> I’m using c++ builder 10.2 Tokyo on windows 10 pro.
> In a console app I’m getting this error message
>
> [ilink32 Error] Error: Unresolved external '___fixunsdfdi' referenced from
> C:\...\PROJECTS\WIN32\DEBUG\SQLITE3.OBJ
>
> I can’t find any mention
On Nov 20, 2018, at 12:41 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
> On Nov 20, 2018, at 11:44 AM, Bill Hashman
> wrote:
>
>> The timestamp from iOS systems is not compliant with ISO 8601/Unix or other
>> common timestamps. It appears apple has their start date offset 31 years.
>
> Yes, the ‘epoch’ in
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