On 11 Oct 2011 at 11:25, David Robley <robleyd@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Tim Streater wrote: >> On 11 Oct 2011 at 10:47, David Robley <robleyd@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> Tim Streater wrote: >>>> On 11 Oct 2011 at 03:03, Paul M Foster <paulf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> On Mon, Oct 10, 2011 at 04:14:00PM +0100, Tim Streater wrote: >>>>>> I would like to use the SQLite3 (not PDO) interface to SQLite, and I >>>>>> would like to be able to supply a string containing several SQL >>>>>> statements and have them all executed, thus saving the overhead of >>>>>> several calls. It *appears* that this may be how it actually works, >>>>>> but I wondered if anyone could confirm that. >>>>> The docs appear to agree that this is allowed. See: >>>>> http://us.php.net/manual/en/function.sqlite-exec.php >>>> That's the SQLite interface, though, rather than the SQLite3 one. The >>>> latter just says: "Executes an SQL query ...". >>> Not to be a smartass or anything, but what about TIAS ? >> What that? > Er, Try It And See > > A couple of minutes experimentation might have saved you the time of email, > wait for an answer ... Well, there is an sqlite3 executable that one can run to do CLI things to a database. OS X comes with that and I was also able to download the source of that program, and the SQLite C amalgamation, and rebuild it myself. It is certainly possible, with that program, to execute a sequence of semi-colon separated statements. It *doesn't* work with PHP's PDO interface to sqlite, as I found in a test program I put together; I haven't properly tested that with the sqlite3 interface. I've tried asking on the sqlite general mailing list and (to me at least), the answers are at best unclear. There is a function, part of the C interface to sqlite, that talks about a sequence of statements, but I guess ultimately it depends on how the writer of the PHP sqlite3 interface implemented it. -- Cheers -- Tim
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