Hi,

On Tue, May 31, 2016 at 11:01 AM, Dominique Devienne
<[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, May 31, 2016 at 4:41 PM, Eric Kestler <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Where does Sqlite actually reside when installed on a Mac?
>>
>
> Probably *inside* navicat.
>
> When you build a native application, you can use static linking of
> libraries you depend on, like SQLite, or dynamic linking.
> With static linking, there's no separate file containing the symbols of the
> library to at runtime load into the application.
> So you cannot upgrade the library w/o upgrading the application.
>
> With dynamic linking, you can, as long as the old and new versions are
> binary compatible.
>
> It is often recommended to statically link SQLite into your app.
>
> I'm not an OSX user, but if it's like Linux, you can run the ldd command on
> your executable file,
> and it will show you which dynamic libraries it depends on. If you don't
> see SQLite, it probably statically linked... --DD

On Mac OSX the program is called "nm", not "ldd". ;-)
]
Thank you.

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