| List: | General Discussion | « Previous MessageNext Message » | |
| From: | Tim Lucia | Date: | March 27 2007 11:49am |
| Subject: | RE: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | ||
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> -----Original Message----- > From: Maciej Dobrzanski [mailto:reg.mysql@stripped] > Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 6:46 AM > To: mysql@stripped > Subject: Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? > > MyISAM and InnoDB (and there are plenty more). RDBMS is not an Office > spreadsheet, you cannot simply change software as from OpenOffice Calc to > MS > Excel and expect everything will work the same. The migration can be done You can and ought to be able to expect it. After all, SQL is a standard. It's a crying shame that so many 'feature' creep in for seemingly the sole purpose of hooking you on that vendor's platform. Of course you'd be naïve to believe it, but nothing is wrong with the expectation. IMO, of course Tim > > Maciek
| Thread | ||
|---|---|---|
| • Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Daevid Vincent | 26 Mar |
| • Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Dan Nelson | 27 Mar |
| • RE: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Daevid Vincent | 27 Mar |
| • Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Dan Nelson | 27 Mar |
| • RE: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Daevid Vincent | 27 Mar |
| • RE: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Wm Mussatto | 27 Mar |
| • Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Jeremy Cole | 27 Mar |
| • Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Daniel Kasak | 27 Mar |
| • RE: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Daevid Vincent | 27 Mar |
| • Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Maciej Dobrzanski | 27 Mar |
| • RE: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Tim Lucia | 27 Mar |
| • Re: Why doesn't the InnoDB count() match table status? | Jochem van Dieten | 27 Mar |
