Maybe. But if I click on the ellipsis, the Windows dialog has CSV
preselected in *Save as type*, even if the prior extension isn't CSV.

But even more strongly, all the settings on the *Export data to file* dialog
are CSV-compliant except that one. Shouldn't common standards be the
default? What value is there in being "almost" CSV vs. being truly CSV?

The problem with this is when you save a CSV with semicolons instead of
commas, other programs may not recognize the file. Already ran into a
problem importing into Excel with semicolon separations. So if I forget
change to comma, I may end up doing an export and may risk a complex CSV
edit later. (It's simple if you're just replacing *";"* with *","* but can
be complex in certain scenarios.)

Aren

On Sat, Nov 6, 2010 at 4:19 PM, Thom Brown <t...@linux.com> wrote:

> On 6 November 2010 21:08, Aren Cambre <a...@arencambre.com> wrote:
>
>> Bug report:
>>
>> When I use File > Export from a Query window, it's clearly trying to make
>> a CSV. The suggested filename is suffixed with .csv.
>>
>
> Are you sure that isn't just there because that's the last filename you
> used?  Mine doesn't default to anything. If I click on the ellipsis and type
> a filename without an extension into the file browser and click OK, it just
> comes up with the path and the filename I typed without an extension.
>
> --
> Thom Brown
> Twitter: @darkixion
> IRC (freenode): dark_ixion
> Registered Linux user: #516935
>

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