On 05/25/2012 07:16 AM, Jonathan Ryshpan wrote:
I have been attempting to send this posting for a while, and have only
recently noticed that the list does not accept attachments. This has
(apparently) caused it to be silently rejected. I have appended what
had been attached to the end of
On 05/26/2012 02:56 PM, NoOp wrote:
...
Mine is installed on Ubuntu/Debian - (I'd need to fire up Fedora in a VM
to test that distro). Here is my .odbc.ini file (configured with OBDConfig):
$ cat /home/gl/.odbc.ini
[SeaMonkeyPlaces.sqlite]
Description = SQLite3
Driver = SQLite3
Database =
On 05/26/2012 03:04 PM, NoOp wrote:
...
I'll give your database a try this weekend also try to find my
...
SQlite database created by:
1. Opening the archive .txt file in Calc then saving as a .csv. Note:
I modified the first header slightly from 'Timestamp' to 'Date Time' so
that I'd have
Le 25/05/12 16:16, Jonathan Ryshpan a écrit :
Hi Jon,
If oobase has connected properly to the database, it is useless for my
purpose and I will give up on it and do what needs done with a bunch of
shell scripts. If oobase has not opened the database properly, I will
persevere.
I took
Le 21/05/12 18:34, Jonathan Ryshpan a écrit :
Hi,
My particular system runs KDE, which requires iodbc for many
applications, so that is what I am using for the database interface.
Iodbc has two kinds of configuration files in two places, namely:
/etc/odbc.ini
Am 21.05.2012 23:40, Jonathan Ryshpan wrote:
blah
Ask your question on a SQLite forum with some _technical_ information
about your operating system, SQLite version of the creating application,
driver version, configuration file, connection URL of the client (Base
Base opens only one particular type of file: the Base document (*.odb). This
file format is basically an archive with info about how to access a certain
tabular data source, where to find it, which protocol to use, which file
filter, which vendor specific driver (analog to a file system driver).