I know that several people don't see when I post messages to the list, and I 
know that Bob T and I never see our own posts (he usually asks me to confirm 
that his posts made it).  But apparently I also haven't been seeing Larry 
Lustig's posts to the list.  I just have to hope that someone hopefully answers 
so I can see the original post.  Wish I could figure out what's happening!  
Doesn't seem to be a common email service address.
 
Karen
 
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Albert Berry <[email protected]>
To: RBASE-L Mailing List <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, May 19, 2015 10:04 am
Subject: [RBASE-L] - Re: Using INSERT. . . SELECT on server table.


 Just a thought -- is the SQL Server looking in its own table list for 
SYS_FORMS3? 
 Albert 
  
  
On 5/19/2015 8:48 AM, Lawrence Lustig wrote:  
  
  
   
    
I've created a test table in SQL Server database like this:   
    
    
    
    
    CREATE TABLE TestData (  IntColumn INTEGER)   
    
    
    
    
and attached it to my RBase 9.5 / 64 database like this:   
    
    
    
    
    SATTACH dbo.TestData as SVRTestData USING InvColumn    
    
    
    
    
    
I can then issue the command    
    
    
    
    
    INSERT INTO SVRTestData (IntColumn) VALUES (10)    
    
    
    
    
    
and the value 10 is correctly inserted into the server database.   
    
    
    
    
However, when I issue the command   
    
    
    
    
    INSERT INTO SVRTestData (IntColumn) SELECT 10 FROM SYS_FORMS3 WHERE LIMIT = 
1    
    
    
    
    
    
which should do exactly the same thing, I get the error     Resources required 
by the command are not available.   
    
    
    
    
What do I need to do in order to insert data from an R:Base table into a server 
table (and, of course, vice-versa).  My goal is to pump rather substantial 
number of records back and forth; this is just the simplest case I could 
create.   
    
    
    
    
--   
    
Larry   
   
  
  
  
-- 
A democracy ..." can only exist until the majority discovers it can vote itself 
largess out of the public treasury."
Attributed to Alexander Fraser Tytler 1747-1813
 

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