Hi all,
I would be interested in playing around with the beta version for the
Windows native port - where can I get it?
TIA.
Paul...
--
plinehan y_a_h_o_o and d_o_t com
C++ Builder 5 SP1, Interbase 6.0.1.6 IBX 5.04 W2K Pro
Please do not top-post.
"XML avoids the fundamental question
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> > That makes sense to me. I wonder if sqlite suffers for this problem
> > (e.g. app crashing and corrupting the database).
> Likely. I can tell you that Ann Harrison once told me she made a decent
> amount of money as a consultant fixing broken Interbase/Firebi
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> err... i think you misunderstood... I'm was looking for a link to show the
> mozilla folks saying they would stop using the firebird name. I've never
> heard such a thing, while I have heard the opposite, and the info you site
> above only seems to verify that mozi
Not really a PostgreSQL question, but maybe somebody here knows the
answer!
I recently purchased Groff and Weinberg's The Complete Reference SQL,
and a fine meaty tome it is too!
However, I find to my absolute *_horror_* that there doesn't appear to
be an electronic version of the sample d
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> > What then is a derived table, or is a derived table just a synonym for
> > inline view?
> I'm not sure what the "official" name for this is. I have heard both. So
> from my point of view a derived table and an inline view are the same.
OK - I'm fine with the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> >>SELECT count(*) FROM (SELECT col1, col2 FROM table)
> > I did select count(*) from phone_list and it worked.
> Sure you can do a select from a view, but try the above statement where the
> view definition is "embedded" diretly into the SELECT. This is not
> su
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> Paul Ganainm schrieb:
> FB does not support inline views/derived tables, e.g.:
> SELECT count(*) FROM (SELECT col1, col2 FROM table)
If you have IB/FB, there is a sample db that comes with it, Employee.
There is a view in that db called phone_lis
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> That's a good discussion, but it left out at least one useful bit of
> info about managing large objects: there's a contrib utility
> (contrib/vacuumlo) that can find and remove large objects that are not
> referenced anywhere in the database.
What is the URL for
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> A partial index is a index on a subset of a table. The case I can think of
> is a list of transactions, some of which are yet to be billed. They have a
> BillID field which is NULL. since this is the recent set it is queried quite
> often, so you can build an index li
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> > Ditto for FB. If you want to extend the code, though, you have to give
> > those changes back to the community - the licence is more GPL than BSD.
> maybe you need to clarify what you think of when you say "extensible".
> postgresql has sql extensions like "cre
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> AFAICT, the main thing that Firebird lacks is a viable open-source
> development community :-(.
This is untrue - go to www.ibphoenix.com and follow the links to the
lists.
> It's a nice bit of software, and I'd be
> happy to see it doing better, but it seems lik
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> Last night after posting this I asked myself. Could I get the same kind of
> support (basically an answer to any question within 24 hours from one of the
> actual postgres developers) with firebird that I can get here? I doubt it.
www.ibphoenix.com - go to lists a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> Yes, I didn't mean to make a statement about firebird support (which I know
> nothing about)
But that didn't stop you actually making an (untrue) statement about it!
> but rather I was just trying to comment on and show
> appreciation for the amazing support that
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> tested, solid, native replication both syncronous and asyncronous (at least
> they list this as a feature, I assume it works as advertised)
As an Interbase/Firebird user, I'm confused by this.
There is a replication solution, but AFAIK, it's commercial - not Open
Hi all,
This is not so much a question specific to PostgreSQL, but rather a
general "application of theory" type of problem!
I did post this on comp.databases.theory but received no replies there.
If anyone here is interested and this is a suitable forum in the
PostgreSQL hierarchy, that w
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