On 7/24/22 17:27, Mladen Gogala wrote:
On 7/24/22 19:56, Taka Taka wrote:
Hello.
I posted question bellow.
And? No takers? I wonder why. Maybe the question is unclear? This is
really surprising :)
The question was straight forward and clear.
Hello.
I would like to know if psqlodbc_13_02 is compatible with M365.
Also, could you please tell me which of the psqlodbc_13_02 would be
suitable to Windows 10 64-bit?
What is M365? Is it a part of Microsoft Office 365, aka "O365"? Is it
related to M-16? What di you mean by "driver suitable for Windows 10"?
If the driver can be installed and configured by the MS ODBC driver
administrator, then I guess it's suitable. Make sure the driver you use
is mauve, they take the least RAM
The ODBC lacks the version matrix the JDBC site:
https://jdbc.postgresql.org/download.html
has so I think is appropriate to verify version compatibility. Though as
I mentioned it probably a low work task to just try it.
Was my question inappropriate?
I wanted to know if the pdbc driver above would be compatible to
Microsoft's M365.
What part of Office 365 do you want the compatibility with? Excel?
Other parts of Office also use database connectivity such as Access or
Word.
Also, I find variety in the odbc driver.
I don't. ODBC drivers implement the same protocol when communicating
with the database and they all work the same. Here is what I have:
Hmm, I wonder why they have versions then?
As to below, really? If you don't want to answer the question then don't.
The string "f36" in the PostgreSQL ODBC package name denotes a very
special version of Windows, more advanced than even Windows 11. I was
able to connect all 3 of the drivers above to LibreOffice and use them
to query the underlying database. I was able to do the same on my
Windows 8.1, with all 3 of those drivers.
Is it possible to know which of the driver is suitable to Windows 10
64-bit?
Suitable how? What exactly do you want to do? What does the word
"suitable" even mean in the context you're using it?
Or could you please tell me where to inquire?
There is this site named "https://www.google.com" which can be used to
find a lot of useful information and some paid ads, too. As of lately, I
prefer DDG, but that's just a personal preference.
If there were no takers for the first question, that may say something
about the question. At this point, you gotta ask yourself one question
only: do I feel lucky?
--
Mladen Gogala
Database Consultant
Tel: (347) 321-1217
https://dbwhisperer.wordpress.com
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx