Colin Wetherbee wrote:
> Colin Wetherbee wrote:
>> Also, is there a way to forcibly remove tables and views from the
>> output? In all.xml, I only list the tables I want, but in addition
>> to those, I also get my PostGIS tables and all the views I've created
>> within the schema.
>
> And...
>
> I
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
>
>>
>> Can you look at the PS file, and make sure that you're at least getting
>> a legitimate postscript diagram?
>
> It turned out I had incorrectly added my schema information.
>
> Works now, with NetPBM.
>
> Cool tool!
Glad you like it. I've found it personally indispens
am Thu, dem 03.04.2008, um 15:40:41 -0700 mailte Colin Fox folgendes:
> Hello everyone.
>
> There were a number of people asking about ERD tools here a while ago,
> so I decided to publish one that I've put together.
>
> It's called Autograph, and you can find it on the pg foundry:
>
> http://p
Colin Fox wrote:
brian wrote:
From the example page:
"I also wanted to make sure that there were "no dead crows" -- having
the crows-feet right side up makes the diagram a lot more readable in
my humble opinion."
Um ... those arrows look backwards to me :-(
Actually, crows feet are supposed
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Also, is there a way to forcibly remove tables and views from the
output? In all.xml, I only list the tables I want, but in addition to
those, I also get my PostGIS tables and all the views I've created
within the schema.
And...
If I set the tablemode to "detailed", a
Colin Fox wrote:
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Colin Fox wrote:
Autograph is really just an XSL stylesheet, used in combination with
graphviz, xsltproc, convert and the downloadXml.py program from Scott
Kirkwood's xmltoddl package.
I'm familiar with graphviz and xsltproc, but
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
> Colin Wetherbee wrote:
>> Colin Fox wrote:
>>> Autograph is really just an XSL stylesheet, used in combination with
>>> graphviz, xsltproc, convert and the downloadXml.py program from Scott
>>> Kirkwood's xmltoddl package.
>>
>> I'm familiar with graphviz and xsltproc, but
brian wrote:
> Colin Fox wrote:
>> Hello everyone.
>>
>> There were a number of people asking about ERD tools here a while ago,
>> so I decided to publish one that I've put together.
>>
>> It's called Autograph, and you can find it on the pg foundry:
>>
>> http://pgfoundry.org/projects/autograph/
>
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
> Colin Wetherbee wrote:
>> Colin Fox wrote:
>>> Autograph is really just an XSL stylesheet, used in combination with
>>> graphviz, xsltproc, convert and the downloadXml.py program from Scott
>>> Kirkwood's xmltoddl package.
>>
>> I'm familiar with graphviz and xsltproc, but
Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Colin Fox wrote:
Autograph is really just an XSL stylesheet, used in combination with
graphviz, xsltproc, convert and the downloadXml.py program from Scott
Kirkwood's xmltoddl package.
I'm familiar with graphviz and xsltproc, but what is convert? Is this
Imagemagick's
Colin Fox wrote:
There were a number of people asking about ERD tools here a while ago,
so I decided to publish one that I've put together.
It's called Autograph, and you can find it on the pg foundry:
http://pgfoundry.org/projects/autograph/
Looks handy. I'd like to give it a try.
Autogra
Colin Fox wrote:
Hello everyone.
There were a number of people asking about ERD tools here a while ago,
so I decided to publish one that I've put together.
It's called Autograph, and you can find it on the pg foundry:
http://pgfoundry.org/projects/autograph/
Cool! Nice to have a new option
Hello everyone.
There were a number of people asking about ERD tools here a while ago,
so I decided to publish one that I've put together.
It's called Autograph, and you can find it on the pg foundry:
http://pgfoundry.org/projects/autograph/
Autograph is really just an XSL stylesheet, used in c
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