On Wednesday, 26 June, 2019 10:59, a...@zator.com wrote:
>Irreproachable argumentation, which in my humble opinion is little or
>nothing useful to those who want to enter in the diabolic world of
>SQL. Especially, if you have not yet managed to change the chip and
>find out that for example, you
On Jun 26, 2019, at 3:31 PM, James K. Lowden wrote:
>
> You won't find many examples included with your C compiler
That depends a lot on the C compiler in question. Some C compilers include a
*lot* of examples.
Arguably, K&R is a bound book of examples for the AT&T Unix C compiler. Where
is
On Sat, 22 Jun 2019 23:14:08 -0700
Ben Earhart wrote:
> can't be bothered to write example sql code
While I'm sure you're irritated, that criticism is misplaced.
You might want to take a step back. Tools that work with standardized
languages don't define the language they process. You won't fin
Thanks for reporting this one. It is a bug. Now fixed here:
https://sqlite.org/src/info/5fd20e09a522b62a
Ticket:
https://sqlite.org/src/info/9cdc5c46
Dan.
> We recently updated from version 3.26.0 to version 3.28.0. Now we're seeing
> different (incorrect) results for the following query.
On Jun 26, 2019, at 2:58 PM, ingo wrote:
>
> On 26-6-2019 22:22, Warren Young wrote:
>> 3. Lack of types.
>
> Not being a programmer, that was a revelation to me
Behind my prior two posts isn’t an attitude of criticism of SQLite’s design and
implementation, but rather an itch created by the ga
On 26-6-2019 22:22, Warren Young wrote:
> 3. Lack of types.
Not being a programmer, that was a revelation to me, I started with
Postgresql (upgrading to SQLite now) and wasted way to many hours on
deciding the type. In SQLite it is straight forward. If I use
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP in the shell it sho
On Jun 26, 2019, at 2:22 PM, Warren Young wrote:
>
> 3. …types…table…more comprehensive, so that whatever weird data type you
> search for, you either get a simple mapping to one of SQLite’s few base data
> types or to a recipe showing how to construct a suitable alternative.
…or a pointer to
On Jun 26, 2019, at 11:11 AM, Simon Slavin wrote:
>
> I too have missed sample code from the SQLite documentation. I agree that
> there are some drawbacks to including it. But there are some things, like
> the correct sequence is for understanding ROLLBACKs, which are strange and
> complicat
https://www.sqlite.org/custombuild.html
https://www.sqlite.org/vfs.html
śr., 26 cze 2019 o 08:34 napisał(a):
> Dear SQLite Team,
>
>
>
> I am very new to SQLite and want to use SQLite in my project which is based
> on ARM Cortex M7 core. Do we have any examples available for porting SQLite
> to
On 26.06.19 18:58, a...@zator.com wrote:
Irreproachable argumentation, which in my humble opinion is little or nothing
useful to those who want to enter in the diabolic world of SQL. Especially, if
you have not yet managed to change the chip and find out that for example, you
must carry out a
> On Jun 26, 2019, at 9:58 AM, a...@zator.com wrote:
>
> the sad reality is that it is difficult to find examples of SQL, apart from
> being attentive to these pages where sometimes you learn a lot in the code of
> some answers.
I don’t know what to say to that! Have you looked outside the SQ
On 26 Jun 2019, at 5:58pm, a...@zator.com wrote:
> I understand and empathize absolutely with the O.P. and must add that in the
> documentation of SQLite, I have always missed examples and comments that, for
> example, can be found in the PHP doc.
Likewise. The PHP system of documentation, whe
Irreproachable argumentation, which in my humble opinion is little or nothing
useful to those who want to enter in the diabolic world of SQL. Especially, if
you have not yet managed to change the chip and find out that for example, you
must carry out a program without using variables.
All the p
> On Jun 25, 2019, at 11:34 PM, vi...@ngxtech.com wrote:
>
> I am very new to SQLite and want to use SQLite in my project which is based
> on ARM Cortex M7 core. Do we have any examples available for porting SQLite
> to cortex M series microcontroller??
It’s written in highly portable C, so jus
I've always been perturbed by the term "Real World Examples". Because...
well.. Everything is different from one building to the next. How I make
my SQL calls is going to be different than the company across the street.
Heck, even the guy sitting across from me will come up with a different way
t
On 2019/06/23 8:14 AM, Ben Earhart wrote:
...that the person(s) that has no problem writing small, but solid, walls
of technical detail and drawing intricate circularly recursive syntax
diagrams which require multiple levels of detail to coherently represent,
can't be bothered to write example sq
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