How about: 1. Save the database with "db.export_to_csv_file(open('somefile.csv', 'wb'))" -- The csv file should only contain columns defined in the current database. I have not checked this - seems reasonable.
2. Erase the entire contents of applications\myapp\databases -- This includes the web2py migration info and the actual database storage (for sqlite at least) 3. Regenerate database by surfing to any page -- The migration mechanism will detect the absence of a database, and recreate one per the current model 4. Refill the database with "db.import_from_csv_file(open ('somefile.csv', 'rb'))" 3. The migration mechanism will detect the absence of a database, and recreate one per the current model Karl On Jan 15, 2:41 pm, Jeff Bauer <jba...@rubic.com> wrote: > On 01/15/2010 03:36 PM, mdipierro wrote: > > > On Jan 15, 3:24 pm, Jeff Bauer<jeffru...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Use case: When I access my database outside of DAL, I've got > >> a bunch of old columns that are no longer in use. > > > I assume you use sqlite. sqlite cannot drop columns.With a different > > database (if migrate!=False) the database should be exactly what your > > model say. > > I see: http://www.sqlite.org/faq.html#q11 > > So no easy way to do this, but if I want to remove the > clutter anyway I suppose I can: > > 1. export table to csv > 2. drop the table > 3. remove the column(s) from the csv file > 4. turn off migration > 5. import csv > 6. turn on migration > > Have I left out any steps? > > -Jeff
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