Thank you very much Andrew.
Regards,
Lloyd
On Thu, 2007-07-12 at 23:37 -0500, Andrew Finkenstadt wrote:
> Use sqlite_int64 as your type. That typedef supports 'long long' or 'signed
> __int64' or whatever the compiler environment needs.
>
> --a
>
> On 7/12/07, Lloyd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Use sqlite_int64 as your type. That typedef supports 'long long' or 'signed
__int64' or whatever the compiler environment needs.
--a
On 7/12/07, Lloyd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks Andy.
So, SQLite doesn't have its own features to manage this? So I must be
able to perform 64bit operations
Thanks Andy.
So, SQLite doesn't have its own features to manage this? So I must be
able to perform 64bit operations on a 32bit machine using C. How can I
do that? or how to declare a 64bit integer on a 32bit machine?
Thanks,
Lloyd
On Thu, 2007-07-12 at 15:06 -0500, Andrew Finkenstadt wrote:
>
It uses the feature built-in to the language compiler that you use.
In the case of Visual Studio (Microsoft, x86) the underlying compiler uses
either the library implementations or direct assembly code using pairs of
registers and whatever dual-register assembly instructions are available on
the
Hi,
Can I know how SQLite performs 64bit operations (addition,
multiplication, division) on 32bit machine?
Thank you very much,
Lloyd
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