Databases
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A short guide for everyone on how to structure your data and set-up your MySQL database tables efficiently and easily.
How best to collect, name, group, and structure your data
Design your data with future growth in mind
Practical examples from initial ideas to final designs
In More Detail
Available Now
by Paul DuBois (Author)
The unexpected pleasure of reading books about databases is that they
are often written by authors with highly organized minds. Paul DuBois
and his editors at New Riders have assembled MySQL
with a clarity and lucidity that inspires confidence in the subject
matter: a (nearly) freely redistributable SQL-interpreting database
client/server primarily geared for Unix systems but maintained for
Windows platforms as well. What isn't "free" about MySQL (the
application) is its server's commercial use; all clients and
noncommercial server use are free. DuBois's tome isn't free either, but
its list price is modest in light of its value and the value of its
namesake.
by Joseph J. Adamski (Author), Kathy T. Finnegan (Author)
Part of the New Perspectives series, this text offers a case-based,
problem-solving approach and innovative technology to make learning
Microsoft Access 2003 skills both meaningful and memorable for
students.
Text provides comprehensive instruction of Microsoft Access 2003, from
essential database concepts through advanced topics such as macros and
VBA. Softcover. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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