Am 24.07.2007 um 04:43 schrieb Kenneth Gonsalves:

> The current versions of those manuals do not seem to
> have those sections any more - so how can you trust a group that is
> rewriting it's history?

You're always right and never wrong, eh?

Sorry, but such statements as yours are plain FUD. MySQL said already  
many times that they were wrong and they added some of the features.  
And that should be enough. The old manuals are still available as far  
as I know. And even if not, it's irrelevant because nobody likes to  
have outdated stuff in a manual.

We run MySQL since the early 3.23 ages and MySQL has proven to be  
reliable and very easy to use. It gives us some good features and  
some others not. But we are aware of most of the advantages and  
disadvantages and therefore know where we can use MySQL and where  
not. Because of that we are using SQLite and PostgreSQL too. Use a  
hammer for a nail and a a screwdriver for a screw.

Choose that database, that gives you all the features you need (but  
please bear in mind: having features you never use don't give you  
anything) and that one you feel more comfortable with.

A.


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