The purpose of this article is to show how to configure unixODBC under Sun Solaris for readiness to programming a C++ OTL application with the PostgreSQL database. Consider this article the resulting experience of putting all pieces together, mixing tips from other articles already published in the OTL home page, some advice from Sergei (OTL author) and the total effort of about 5 hours to make a sample code work. The second objective is to provide a safe path to the C++ developer who is anxious in getting this stuff ready without pain.
This article explores the power and simplicity of sqlite3, starting with common commands and triggers. It then covers the attach statement with the union operation, introduced in a way that allows multiple tables, in separate databases, to be combined as one virtual table, without the overhead of copying or moving data.
Just like writing an article, testing is a skill. While this may come as a surprise to some people, it is a simple fact. For any system, there are several possible test cases, and yet, invariably, we have time to run only a few of them, which in turn are expected to find most of the defects in the software. We know from experience that this is simply not possible. Therefore, in order to increase the chances of finding defects, testing tools may be used. There are numerous testing tools, each with specific capabilities and test objectives.
Lemon is a compact, thread safe, well-tested parser generator written by Dr. Richard Hipp. Using a parser generator, along with a scanner like flex, can be advantageous because there is less code to write. You just write the grammar for the parser.
Projects are appearing that attempt to bring Visual Basic clones to Linux. Marc Boorshtein, a former VB programmer, thinks this is a mistake, and that we should be innovating with what we already have instead of spending time working at emulating what he considers a technological dead end.
Everything about hosting types you wanted to know…but was afraid to ask.
This article will end confusion about different hosting types. Below are described all hosting types you need to know about.
Free hosting
– is a type of hosting where you don't have to pay for your space with
money, but the service is often compensated with advertisements. Free
hosting offers poor or no support at all and has many other
disadvantages. Free hosting is more a thing of past, since hosting has
become very cheap.