lbland wrote:
Yes, I read the saga of this on multiple sites of how EOF was stripped down and mis-assimilated into the WebKit framework.On Sep 10, 2008, at 1:40 PM, Martin Stoufer wrote:I have been pouring over the archives and digging around the net to see what the current status of this is. It looks like Apple does not have any current plans to expose an ODBC type as a data store(?) and the current work around is to stage the content from the db as a file on the system and use that as the store.true.and Core Data is not EOF (Enterprise Object Framework). Core Data lacks the needed features that EOF has.
I know full well that any solution, be it subtle or not, would render me a pound of flesh lighter. I am currently using the ODBCKit.framework and at least I'm making some headway, albiet w/o the CoreData functionality.Has anyone done anything more evolved than this yet?No. (not us anyways!)I setup a System DSN with ODBC Administrator and a connection is made to the Oracle db I need. Surely, there is some subtle way to plug this and the data model I have in XCode together.That is what we do.P.S. - the subtle ways may seem like something for free, but they open up a can of worms. All IMHO.
thanks!- -lance
-- * Martin C. Stoufer * * ISS/IT * * Lawrence Berkeley National Lab * * 510-486-5306 * * MS 937-700 *
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