As I'm trying to get back as I now have some time, I just discovered
this mail.
On Mon, 2013-01-21 at 11:08 +, Dave Page wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Michal Kozusznik
> wrote:
> > On 17.1.2013 16:54, Dave Page wrote:
> >>
> >> It's not a case of voting I'm afraid. It's finding s
>
> When team working on pgAdmin will get rid of all bugs (hope it is not
> infinity collection) then they may start on improving the product.
> I know pgAdmin is open source and its for free. But it is not reason to
> answer this way. I noticed that any improvement request is rejected with
>
On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Michal Kozusznik
wrote:
> On 17.1.2013 16:54, Dave Page wrote:
>>
>> It's not a case of voting I'm afraid. It's finding someone with the
>> time and desire to implement the feature.
>>
>
> When team working on pgAdmin will get rid of all bugs (hope it is not
> inf
On 17.1.2013 16:54, Dave Page wrote:
It's not a case of voting I'm afraid. It's finding someone with the
time and desire to implement the feature.
When team working on pgAdmin will get rid of all bugs (hope it is not
infinity collection) then they may start on improving the product.
I know pg
On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 3:47 PM, Michal Kozusznik
wrote:
> I think the feature you are looking for is obtained using right click over
> table and selecting "View data... filtered rows".
>>
>> It's live and editable.
>>
>>
>
> Yes it is. But is not comfy enough for daily work
> It is implemented ve
I think the feature you are looking for is obtained using right click
over table and selecting "View data... filtered rows".
It's live and editable.
Yes it is. But is not comfy enough for daily work
It is implemented very well in MySQL software (Query Browser and
Workbench). You can edit res