I took a course back in the day when MSSQL-2000 was just coming out, or just had come out. I learned the nuts and bolts (Right down to the freak'n file format used at the time -- Ironically, that was the best part and I did enjoy that the most), the concepts, the attitude, and the mentality of MS-SQL and some of its features. Anything else I've picked up over the years, I've referred to the Mediocre Metacrawler (Back when it was good and not spam haven) and Glorious Google to give me the answers I needed without having to dust off the old manuals. I avoided Yahoo like the plague. Still do even today. I've purchased SQL cook books, read through their scenarios, attempted to come up with my own result, sometimes succeeding, other times failing so badly I had to ask myself why I even bothered.
If you're looking for a certificate, there are online courses. Use Google to find references for the different sites to VERIFY that they're worth their salt and SELECT statements. Don't look SPECIFICALLY for SQLite as there are no certificates that I'm aware of, so going with another RDBMS, learning what this relational transaction stuff is all about, learn how the SELECT/DELETE/UPDATE statements work with all their parameters and functions, get the foundation to build a working database ground up, THEN translate that into any other language with relative ease. Often times, depending on the position you're applying for, if you put that you have a certificate founded in the RDBMS arena, it won't matter what the back end you're using is, because you can/should be able to easily adapt to whatever technology is there. _______________________________________________ sqlite-users mailing list [email protected] http://sqlite.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users

