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I'm giving you a 5, I can tell you've come into contact with Oracle before.
.net is a box of never ending treasures, every day I get find another gem.
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But, why do you think most financial companies use Oracle?!
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EntitySpaces makes using Oracle trivial, no kidding, see http://www.entityspaces.net, in fact, our unit tests run the same binary against VistaDB, Microsoft SQL, Oracle, MySQL and Access, true db independence, and very intuitive API.
Employee emp = new Employee();
emp.FirstName = "Mike";
emp.LastName = "Smith";
emp.Save();
Dynamic Query
EmployeeCollection coll = new EmployeeCollection();
emp.Query.Where(coll.Query.LastName.Like("Smi%"));
if (coll.Query.Load())
{
foreach (Employee emp in coll)
{
Console.WriteLine(emp.FirstName);
}
}
We support Oracle Sequences and Hierarchical Models, all kinds of cool stuff.
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Only used Oracle in database course projects, not really since then and that was 4 years ago...
"Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon
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I don;t know .
why i don't like use database ,i Just Use XML.
chinese!
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It seems that embedded databases are getting its due
What about being open source like Berkeley DB?
"Silence will create respect and dignity; justice and fair play will bring more friends;
benevolence and charity will enhance prestige and position; courtesy will draw benevolence;
service of mankind will secure leadership and good words will overcome powerful enemies"
Ali (Peace be upon him)
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db4o is very good and easy with C#.
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My data stores are nowhere complex enough to warrant a full-on SQL database. I use XML and do my searches with XPath. XPath is really, really handy once you grok the syntax.
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Michael Dunn wrote: My data stores are nowhere complex enough to warrant a full-on SQL database. I use XML and do my searches with XPath. XPath is really, really handy once you grok the syntax.
I agree and its fairly straight-forward to learn and powerful enough to use in small apps.
Mike
Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear right until you hear them speak.
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Does anyone use DB2 any more?
only two letters away from being an asset
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Mark Nischalke wrote: Does anyone use DB2 any more?
Thank you, Sir,
I thought DB2 was widely used, even if it is only on a datacenter environment.
DB2 generally deserves a place othe list. :-Dn
AlbertDadze
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Hmmm! Do not know. When I started programming, one of the first things I did was write a clone for the code side of that.
INTP
"Program testing can be used to show the presence of bugs, but never to show their absence."Edsger Dijkstra
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Out of curiosity, what kind of projects do you work on?
Telecom is what immediately comes to mind....
Cheers,
Vıkram.
After all is said and done, much is said and little is done.
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Or games, graphics editor, text editor, development tools.
There are plenty of other applications to build besides database applications.
WM.
What about weapons of mass-construction?
"What? Its an Apple MacBook Pro. They are sexy!" - Paul Watson
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Simulations, Mathematical models, Sparse Matrix Calculations, etc…
Repetitive Tasks that kill calculators and erasers.
Good Times,
ARon
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Technical instruments, scientific calculations, modelling
Failure is not an option - it's built right in.
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Assembly automation projects
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virus, worms and other malwares
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Not if you are on the receiving end.
Upcoming events:
* Glasgow: Mock Objects, SQL Server CLR Integration, Reporting Services, db4o, Dependency Injection with Spring ...
* Reading: Developer Day 5
Never write for other people. Write for yourself, because you have a passion for it. -- Marc Clifton
My website
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Software infrastructure and tools for machine vision systems.
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Let’s see. Graphics editors, Text editors (including color coded), Algebraic equation graphics plotters, Simple programming languages, Text processors (different from editors), Complete user interface software (DOS days), Data entry formatting, Modem/TAPI/Serial/INTP, and the list goes on. Basically all the stuff that needs to be without which the average IT programmer would not be able to do their job and then some.
Oh, and code that reads/writes and interprets databases, so that the users (programmers) do not have to do it for them self’s.
Sorry, I got carried away. Some one I met resonantly said programmers where a dime a dozen – but he did not understand.
INTP
"Program testing can be used to show the presence of bugs, but never to show their absence."Edsger Dijkstra
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I work on an app which gets all of its data from an XML feed. I'm sure that feed must be generated from data in a database at some point, but that detail is so far removed from what I do that it might as well come from anywhere.
:josh:
My WPF Blog[ ^]
FYI - Bob is a scarecrow who keeps Chuck Norris away from CodeProject.
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How can i serialize and generate an xml file of the derived class in c# that consists the 5 properties in that 3 are datasets and 2 are class objects.
and i am using c#.net 2005 and sqlserver 2005
can any one help me please
Thanks
Ksrs
-- modified at 10:09 Monday 4th June, 2007
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It's amazing that you can find a forum thread specific to one survey but not any of the forums dealing with C#, XML or SQL Server - all of which would have been better places to post your question.
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