MySQL 5.0 Candidate Released
Brian "Krow" Aker (Former Slashdot Coder now MySQL Employee) writes "I am pleased to announce the release candidate for MySQL 5.0. This version has been in development now for three years. We have worked to add update-able views, ansi stored procedures, and triggers. In addition we have added a number of fun features that we are experimenting with and resolved issues with bad data inserts (which personally annoyed the hell out of me when we rewrote Slashdot a couple of years back so I am happy to see this issue go away). We look forward to feedback on the candidate and will show some love for bug reports."
Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
support for inserts will be added in version 7.0
The war with islam is a war on the beast
The war on terror is a war for peace
If you have a web browser running on hardware that, for some reason or another, cannot display bold text, what should it do?
- Ignore the <strong> and </strong> tags altogether, and display the text anyway, although not bold;
- Crash horribly with an error?
You're accessing the database server from a scripting language. You know what the constraints are. If you're that bothered, you'll check before you try to insert the data. If you haven't bothered to check, you deserve what you get.Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
I am at work, at home I have Ubuntu Linux! True! Don't shoot, please!
839*929
Can find the bug here
First part of the description:
But you all knew where I was going. Since when is SCO a "leading provider" of anything other than laughs and FUD the last few years?
MySQL punched themselves with this SCO deal right before they caught up with other db's - a catchup process that was too slow anyway. Already made the move away from them - was an Oracle/MySQL guy for years, now I'm an Oracle/Postgres guy, with firefox for the little/quick things. Or sometimes just a bdb backend of my own creation. With all the competition out there, MySQL didn't need to introduce this highly annoying bug into their platform.
What did MySQL haters had to say now?
When it has transactions, foreign keys, stored procedures and so on... ?
it was not designed to support transactions, it was not designed to support foreign keys, it was not designed to support stored procedures.So next time, we can get Linux, look at what didn't support the version 1.0... and... you know what? YES! We can argue this against Linux FOREVER! No matter what power it has now! And get 5:Informative!!