Hello Christopher,
> [...]
> Please could you encourage them to do this, or perhaps do it yourself?
> You seem to have a good knowledge of English.
> [...]
I will see, if I can encourage Addison Wesley to translate the book.
Regarding the translation on my own - thank you very much for your
comp
it will contain a rather complex
section about PL/pgSQL-programming and application development, also
accompanied by many examples.
At least I would like to thank Bruce for the offered help - I surely will
remember ;-)
Best regards, Jens Hartwig
-
nt end to let you into the database.
> [...]
If you encrypt the input from the frontend as well and compare the
encrypted strings it will not help you to look into the list of
encrypted passwords ... or am I wrong?
Regards, Jens Hartwig
====
lattened" to one giant database, it
> would have been a nightmare.
>
> I for one really wish that PostgreSQL had this functionality. It is one of
> the biggest things that I miss from other databases.
> [...]
=
Jens Hartwig
times
> >
> > That's incorrect... you can do it all in one statement:
> >
> > GRANT select,update,insert TO "" ON table_1,table_2,table_3,etc
> >
> > http://www.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/7.0/user/sql-grant.htm
> >
> > -Dan
> >
&
ation
> "blah"
> ROLLBACK
> BEGIN
> INSERT 218200 1
> UPDATE 1
> DELETE 1
> ROLLBACK
> -- snip --
>
> and the test file is attached.
>
> --
> hackers ally
>
>
>
>test2.sqlN
before or while processing the request.
The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed.
!#
What happened? Is there any way to repare the damaged table?
Thanks in advance for all of you, who spend their valuable time!
Best regards, Jens
before or while processing the request.
The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed.
!#
What happened? Is there any way to repare the damaged table?
Thanks in advance for all of you, who spend their valuable time!
Best regards, Jens