On 22 Oct 2013, at 5:31am, romtek wrote:
> I started writing this message and then read
> http://www.sqlite.org/lang_transaction.html, and I think I've gotten my
> answer, but I will ask the question to be absolutely certain, particularly
> when using SQLite with PHP (using
Hi, ALL,
I'm trying to build my C++ project which involves SQLite on MAC.
I have Snow Leopard (OS X 10.6.8) along with XCode 4.2.
I successfully made a project in XCode, then moved my cpp files in it.
Now I am trying to add the "sqlite3.c" but I couldn't.
Going to "File"->"Add Files to,,," I see
___
sqlite-users mailing list
sqlite-users@sqlite.org
http://sqlite.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users
Hi,
I used the builtin sqlite library that comes with Mac OS X. The problem I found
was compiling it under 64 bit under X code seemed very difficult. I'm not
blaming SQLite just my poor knowledge of how Xcode works and how 64 bit
compilation worked. I needed 64 bit as I have very large data
On 22 Oct 2013, at 9:17am, Igor Korot wrote:
> Now I am trying to add the "sqlite3.c" but I couldn't.
> Going to "File"->"Add Files to,,," I see only my .cpp, .h and sqlite3.h
> files. I don't see sqlite3.c file in the "Add File" dialog.
>
> Is there any setting I need to
Hello,
The processor where I am running my instance of SQLite has a problem in
that it serializes double-precision floating point values incorrectly. If
the 8-byte double should be stored as 0x123456789ABCDEF0, it is instead
stored as 0x9ABCDEF012345678. Four-byte floating point values are stored
On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 11:47 AM, Michael Foss wrote:
> Hello,
>
> The processor where I am running my instance of SQLite has a problem in
> that it serializes double-precision floating point values incorrectly. If
> the 8-byte double should be stored as 0x123456789ABCDEF0,
On 22 Oct 2013, at 4:47pm, Michael Foss wrote:
> Other solutions I have considered, but have decided are undesirable:
4) Copy the code of SQLite but in your copy change the part of the code which
formats a REAL for writing to disk and the part of the code which reads it
Michael Foss wrote:
> The processor where I am running my instance of SQLite has a problem in
> that it serializes double-precision floating point values incorrectly. If
> the 8-byte double should be stored as 0x123456789ABCDEF0, it is instead
> stored as 0x9ABCDEF012345678.
>
> Other solutions I
That worked like a charm, thank you!
I'm not sure whether this was an oversight or intentional, but I didn't
find this particular compile-time option in the SQLite docs:
http://www.sqlite.org/compile.html. But this is kind of a strange case, so
I can see why you may have intended to leave this as
Hi, Simon,,
On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 2:29 AM, Simon Slavin wrote:
>
> On 22 Oct 2013, at 9:17am, Igor Korot wrote:
>
> > Now I am trying to add the "sqlite3.c" but I couldn't.
> > Going to "File"->"Add Files to,,," I see only my .cpp, .h and sqlite3.h
On 22 Oct 2013, at 7:37pm, Igor Korot wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 2:29 AM, Simon Slavin wrote:
>
>> On 22 Oct 2013, at 9:17am, Igor Korot wrote:
>>
>>> Now I am trying to add the "sqlite3.c" but I couldn't.
>>> Going to
Simon,
First of, thank you for all those links and explanation. Very much
appreciated.
Now, more below.
On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 3:48 PM, Simon Slavin wrote:
>
> On 22 Oct 2013, at 7:37pm, Igor Korot wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 2:29 AM, Simon
On 23 Oct 2013, at 12:13am, Igor Korot wrote:
> Now one last question hopefully. Where XCode will store the db file inside
> the bundle? Is there a specific place or it will go where the executable
> will be put?
If you haven't specified anywhere, then it will just be
14 matches
Mail list logo