World: r3wp
[SQLite] C library embeddable DB .
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BrianH 1-May-2006 [328] | Still, here they are (best estimate based on reading the SQLite C source): - id: The index of the foreign key in the list of foreign keys for the table, 0-based (integer) - seq: The index of the column referenced in the foreign key, 0-based (integer) - table: The name of the referenced table (string) - from: The column name in the local table (string) - to: The column name in the referenced table (string) |
Robert 1-May-2006 [329] | id: Isn't ID only unique for every table? Yours read like ID is unique for the complete database. |
BrianH 1-May-2006 [330x6] | No, this is a diagnostic table generated by a pragma statement. It isn't really a table internally. Still, the key for this "table" is (id,seq) and it is generated by a pragma that takes the table name as a parameter, so it is a seperate "table" for each real table. |
It really is a linked list internally - that's why I called it that :) | |
Each "row" of the "table" refers to a column referenced by a foreign key that may refer to more than one column. | |
And a table may have more than one foreign key. | |
And all of these foreign keys are currently meaningless because they aren't currently checked by SQLite - they are just documentation. | |
Still, you could make a tool that actually read these foreign keys and checked them externally if you want... | |
Robert 1-May-2006 [336] | IIRC you can even access those internal tables of SQLite and query them. |
BrianH 1-May-2006 [337x2] | Well, for the most part this database metadata isn't really stored in tables in SQLite. Instead queries about the metadata are generated from internal structures when needed, by pragma statements. Still, the effect is the same. |
It's kind of cool really when you read how this is done. I guess things can be a lot more interesting for a single-user embedded database engine. You can see where SQLite gets its high performance. | |
Robert 1-May-2006 [339] | I have to take a look at the C code. But #pragma stuff is compile time... |
BrianH 1-May-2006 [340x4] | No, not C pragma, a set of PRAGMA statements that SQLite extensions to SQL, for settings and diagnostics. |
...that _are_ SQLite extensions... | |
Check http://www.sqlite.org/pragma.html | |
The statement that returns the result set we were talking about is: PRAGMA foreign_key_list(table-name); | |
Ashley 1-May-2006 [344] | Thanks, updated page. |
Robert 1-May-2006 [345] | Ah, ok. Now I get it. |
Terry 4-May-2006 [346] | wtcSQLite allows you to add/edit/delete indexes, fields, tables, triggers, views, data, and manage multiple database aliases without knowing any SQL at all. http://www.zend.com/php5/contest/contest.php?id=74&single=1 (it's phpmyadmin for sqlite) |
Robert 8-May-2006 [347x2] | Q: If I have a table with let's say 1 million records and I do a query that returns 250.000 records as result set. Do I get all of them copied into Rebol? Or can I access this result set "pagewise"? |
What's the best pattern to handle such hughe tables? | |
Terry 8-May-2006 [349] | The best pattern for such huge tables? MySQL |
Robert 8-May-2006 [350x2] | No, no option for me. |
So, what can be done is SELECT ... LIMIT n OFFSET m. At least this can handle the result set in defined block sizes on the application level. Of course paging requires a new query each time. | |
Ashley 8-May-2006 [352] | It all depends. 250,000 integers vs 250,000 multi-column rows with large string values client device with 16MB RAM vs 'server' with 4GB RAM 'local' query vs pulling the data over a network There are plenty of optimization strategies. One technique, if concurrency is not an issue for you, is to have your query return 250,000 rowids then page through rows based on simple 'rowid in (...)' type queries. It's fast and efficient, but not too great if others are modifying the same table(s) at the same time. |
Robert 8-May-2006 [353] | I have no concurrency issue. Yes, this might be a good solution too. |
Sunanda 8-May-2006 [354] | Could you use a cursor? (That would work with many other SQLs....Not sure about MySQL's support for them) |
Robert 8-May-2006 [355] | Yes, but SQLite doesn't has this concept. So you can only move forward through a result set. But the set isn't known at this stage. |
Sunanda 8-May-2006 [356] | That's a pity. |
Robert 22-May-2006 [357x2] | What's the best way to get back the columns of a table ONCE? I just need the column names in left-to-right order inside the table. |
How do you solve the problem of schema changes? You develop an app and over time you see that some columns need to be added/removed from tables? What's the best strategy to do this? | |
Pekr 22-May-2006 [359] | output to csv, import? |
Robert 22-May-2006 [360] | This mean on every update the user has to do this cycle... don't think this is an option. |
BrianH 22-May-2006 [361] | Adding is easy - I think SQLite supports ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN. |
Pekr 22-May-2006 [362] | well, how often do you adjust your tables? ;-) then it is not good design imo ... |
BrianH 22-May-2006 [363] | In general, the best strategy can be to rename the table, create a new table with the old name and the new schema, and then make an import query to transform and transfer the data from the old table to the new. Then you can drop the old table. |
Robert 22-May-2006 [364] | If you have a complex app, it's impossible to get the tables right the first step. What I have done so far is to only put data into columns that is required for SELECT statements. All other data is stored as a rebol block in one generic _DATA column. |
Pekr 22-May-2006 [365] | I mean - if you know that you very often will change structure, maybe you should go with Sentenced-like design ... storing pairs of attributes values ... |
Robert 22-May-2006 [366] | That's what I do, see above. I just want to make my app handling cases where the structure changes. |
Pekr 22-May-2006 [367] | so guys use the trick, that they add some 20 spare columns, which they can use later, if there is change needed :-) and later on, after some period, they adjust table and code .... |
Robert 22-May-2006 [368x2] | Hmm... sounds good but is more like a brute force approach. |
Just to repeat it here: What's the best way to get back the columns of a table ONCE? I just need the column names in left-to-right order inside the table. | |
BrianH 22-May-2006 [370] | You could rig something up with the DESCRIBE function. Or you could specify the /info refinement to CONNECT. |
Robert 22-May-2006 [371x2] | Yes, but than I always get back the column names. I can set the col-info? to TRUE and what select statement do I than use? |
One that's fast and small. | |
BrianH 22-May-2006 [373] | By in left-to-right order, do you mean having the names returned in a single row, or will having them in a single column do? |
Pekr 22-May-2006 [374] | Robert - sorry, do not understand what you are asking for - any short code example? (have not tried column names yet, sorry) |
Robert 22-May-2006 [375] | I have a table with columns: [A B C D AA] and I just need to get back them in order [A B C D AA] and not something like [A AA B C D] |
Pekr 22-May-2006 [376x2] | ah, meeting in few minutes, oh my, sorry guys, got to go :-( |
column names? they are not returned in the same order? isn't there their numerical position representation? You could write small function to iterate via those blocks and sort it .... | |
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