You may want to check your database's default time-out.
Not too long ago, I was working in a D5/DB2 suite of apps and we were running into a similar problem. It turned out to be some of the default settings in the database getting to us.
Ralph D. Wilson II
<http:thewizardsguild.com>...
I rather suspect that you have used the BDE to access the file as a "DBaseIV" file. At any rate, you have probably NOT accessed the file as a Clipper File. The net result of that is that you have modified the index and/or the table ind rewritten the file in a format that is not...
If all you have, other than those file types you mentioned, is an .exe file, then you probably don't have the source code. Without the source code, you cannot make the changes you have indicated you want to make.
Ralph D. Wilson II
<http:thewizardsguild.com>
"Any sufficiently advanced...
SkiFlyer,
While I might accept that requiring an OS vendor (i.e. M$) to support a 10 year old OS would be costly, would it not be reasonable for them to put non-supported OS source code into the Open Source community? After all, M$ contends that anyone who buys or is donated an old computer...
IMHO, if you are going to convert your Access database to MS SQL, then why not go all the way and, as you've pointed out, set up the printer information in a table (or tables) in the MS SQL database. If your users have a truly local printer (as in, one that is hung off their desktop computer)...
I think that a significant point of contention with regard to abandoned Operating Systems has been missed. Microsoft has created unique variants of its Windows operating systems for various vendors (e.g. Compaq) so that those vendors computers do not work as well with generic Windows OS's. In...
Well, the trick is going to be loading the jpeg into a blob field in DB2.
An alternative would be to store the JPEG somewhere on the network and load a link to it into a DB2 string field.
Now you have me intrigued and I may have to do a bit of playing around to see if I can't figure out...
The problem is your choice of databases. Paradox presents that response to several aspects of "standard" SQL.
Instead of using the SQL statement in a query, try using a table and setting a filter to limit it to displaying/selecting only those records with a DueDate of the current...
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