in my SQLite.dll library program.
On Tue, Feb 21, 2017 at 2:42 PM, Clyde Eisenbeis wrote:
> I don't recall how I obtained the SQLite files ... was two years ago.
>
> When I have SQLite installed on my genealogy program and on my SQLite
> .dll library, it works fine.
>
> When I don't have SQLite i
I don't recall how I obtained the SQLite files ... was two years ago.
When I have SQLite installed on my genealogy program and on my SQLite
.dll library, it works fine.
When I don't have SQLite installed on my genealogy program, I get an
exception "Unable to load DLL 'SQLite.Interop.dll': ... " w
Are you using NuGet or downloading the binaries from System.Data.Sqlite.org?
Ah. You'll have to excuse me, it's been a while since I actually started a
new project and set SQLite as a dependency. I'm not sure if things have
changed, or if my memory is terrible, but what I said may not have been
co
Thanks for the good info!
I can't find SQLite.Interop.dll ... is referenced at
https://system.data.sqlite.org/index.html/doc/trunk/www/downloads.wiki,
but don't see a download.
On Mon, Feb 20, 2017 at 12:30 PM, Barry Smith wrote:
> I would use system.data.sqlite in that situation.
>
> But I woul
I would use system.data.sqlite in that situation.
But I would also say it depends on what you already have written, and what your
strengths are. I am under the impression from your first email that you already
have something written using system.data.sqlite. i.e. Using the class
System.Data.SQL
Thanks for the clarification. In my case:
1) Speed is not an issue. Size is not an issue.
2) This is a personal use database (genealogy).
3) Typically I create .dll's that serve as a library (WPF Custom
Control Library) ... easy to use for different programs.
4) For example, I have an Excel .
Strange, I replied to this earlier... Perhaps my messages are not getting
through.
You cannot include a .c file for compilation in a c# project. You'd have to do
use a separate DLL and do some pinvoke stuff to get to the raw SQLite
interface, but in my opinion you're better off using the system
Sorry for the slow response.
My code is in C#. I don't know if the amalgamation source code in C
can be compiled so it is compatible with C#.
If it can, I'd be interested in details. Thanks!
On Sat, Feb 18, 2017 at 1:29 AM, R Smith wrote:
>
>
> On 2017/02/18 12:45 AM, Warren Young wrote:
>>
>
On 2017/02/18 12:45 AM, Warren Young wrote:
On Feb 17, 2017, at 7:32 AM, R Smith wrote:
You can even checkout the latest commits via SVN
There’s a Subversion mirror of the official Fossil code repository for SQLite?
Apologies, force of habit nomenclature. Have fallen to calling any
Softwa
On Feb 17, 2017, at 7:32 AM, R Smith wrote:
>
> You can even checkout the latest commits via SVN
There’s a Subversion mirror of the official Fossil code repository for SQLite?
I tried to search the web for it, but since Subversion uses SQLite internally
to manage its own code repositories, I g
(A little bit off topic)
On Fri, Feb 17, 2017 at 9:32 AM, R Smith wrote:
> . though some wrappers exist for almost all programming languages and
> they are relatively easy to use too - *but for brute speed and control,
> use the API directly.*
>
Ever since I found SQLite3 and a decent wrapp
System.Data.SQLite is the package you want if you just want a .Net style (i.e.
Using the standard .net db interfaces) wrapper around SQLite. You can find it
on NuGet.
The entity framework is a library that maps database entries and relations to
OOP style objects. Look up object relational mappi
On 2017/02/17 4:11 PM, Clyde Eisenbeis wrote:
Is SQLite Version 3 the same as SQLite3? ...
http://www.sqlite.org/download.html.
Yes.
You have been using SQLite3 through a wrapper, a good one by the way,
but the core API comes as a single C file which can be compiled into
your program directly
Is SQLite Version 3 the same as SQLite3? ...
http://www.sqlite.org/download.html.
On Thu, Feb 16, 2017 at 3:01 PM, Simon Slavin wrote:
>
> On 16 Feb 2017, at 8:40pm, Clyde Eisenbeis wrote:
>
>> Is there an SQLite version that is comprised of fewer dlls, etc.? ...
>> Perhaps SQLite3?
>
> If you’r
On 16 Feb 2017, at 8:40pm, Clyde Eisenbeis wrote:
> Is there an SQLite version that is comprised of fewer dlls, etc.? ...
> Perhaps SQLite3?
If you’re writing C or C++ code all you need is the amalgamation source code
files from the SQLite3 site. You compile them into your program. No DLLs
I started writing SQLite code about two years ago (Visual Studio 2013,
C#, WPF) ... with a significant delay, since then, because of a
physical move.
The code is written for a specific use on my computer ... no other users.
SQLite was chosen so my sons could eventually install this program on
the
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