Yabut I'm talking about changes I'd made 30 seconds before to code I'd written 5 minutes before. My short-term memory is nothing to write home about, even if I could remember my mailing address!
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:27:28 PM UTC-8, Rob Day wrote: > Glad I could help! > > > > <evangelism> > > Using a local source control system like git, bzr or hg is really > > useful in situations like these - it's far, far easier to debug issues > > of the form "I made changes and now it's broken" when you can do `git > > diff yesterday's-version today's-version` and see exactly what the > > changes were. > > </evangelism> > > > > On 15 January 2013 20:29, llanitedave <llanited...@veawb.coop> wrote: > > > On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 9:13:13 AM UTC-8, Rob Day wrote: > > >> On 15 January 2013 15:51, llanitedave <llanited...@veawb.coop> wrote: > > >> > > >> > Thanks for the suggestion, Rob, but that didn't make any difference. > >> > I've never had an issue with putting the execute object into a variable > >> > and calling "fetch" on that variable. > > >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > I can accept reality if it turns out that foreign keys simply isn't > >> > enabled on the Python distribution of sqlite, although I don't know why > >> > that should be the case. I'm just curious as to why it worked at first > >> > and then stopped working. > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> Well - you might be able to accept that, but I'm not sure I can! If it > > >> > > >> was working before, it must be compiled in, and so it must be possible > > >> > > >> to make it work again. > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> http://www.sqlite.org/foreignkeys.html#fk_enable seems to suggest that > > >> > > >> "PRAGMA foreign_keys = ON" never returns anything, and it's only > > >> > > >> "PRAGMA foreign_keys" which returns 0, 1 or None (when unsupported). > > >> > > >> With that in mind, does the following code work? > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> # open database file > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> self.geologger_db = sqlite3.connect('geologger.mgc') > > >> > > >> self.db_cursor = self.geologger_db.cursor() > > >> > > >> self.db_cursor.execute("PRAGMA foreign_keys = ON") > > >> > > >> self.db_cursor.execute("PRAGMA foreign_keys") > > >> > > >> print self.db_cursor.fetchone() > > > > > > "http://www.sqlite.org/foreignkeys.html#fk_enable seems to suggest that > > "PRAGMA foreign_keys = ON" never returns anything, and it's only "PRAGMA > > foreign_keys" which returns 0, 1 or None (when unsupported)." > > > > > > That was it, exactly, Rob. I don't know where I got the idea that I was > > getting a '1' from the 'ON' command, although I was sure that I'd seen it. > > But once I just called "foreign_key" it returned just fine. > > > > > > Ummm... Obviously I was up fiddling around too late. Yeah, that's it. > > > > > > > > > Thanks! It's solved now. > > > -- > > > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > > > > > > > > -- > > Robert K. Day > > robert....@merton.oxon.org -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list