Brad,
I know nothing about infotrieve, but why can't you use OPENSEQ and then a
READBLK loop?
READBLK reads the next N bytes from a file, not caring if there are line
delimiters of other strange characters.
Regards,
Marc
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De: u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org
[mailto:
John,
I don't remember which one but I believe it's one of the STATUS atributes.
After OPENing the file your can do a STATUS of the file variable and one of
these tells you if the file is 64bit. I had to do a program a few months ago
to find all 32 bit files that were nearing the 2gb limit and used
For me, the key point is knowing how many records per day are going to be
written to the log. If it's a reasonably small amount, better to write out
to a text file with the log date as the key, makes for easy log reading. If
it's a bit more than that I agree more or less with Phil below. I would
cr
Thanks for replying Jay:
It doesn't work with Administrator either, hence the question as to if anyone
know where it's trying to write to.
Yeah, I know it's now XAdmin, but for now gotta use UniAdmin.
Thanks,
Marc
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De: u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org
[mailto:u2-use
Perhaps I am not understanding some part of the issue, but we regularly
update on-line SQL, Oracle or DB2 from UVBasic, using Universe 10.2 running
on windows, without any middleware. It was just a question of reading the
manuals regarding the steps:
- Set up a System DSN
- Update uvodbc.config
- T
What happens wif you open to regular variable then pass it over to the
array:
OPENSEQ TO FVAR
FILEVARS(1) = FVAR
?
Regards,
Marc
-Mensaje original-
De: u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org
[mailto:u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org] En nombre de Rajesh Menon
Enviado el: lunes, 17 d
Good morning.
Is there a command that I can execute from TCL in universe (Windows 10.1.18)
that indicates total available shared memory?
Thanks,
Marc
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Will,
Please take this constructively: I'm not really sure what an asshat is, but
frequently you seem to fit the bill.
A forum where unpleasant remarks are frequently in use takes seriousness
away from this useful tool we all have, and might discourage what I believe
we all want, that being more p