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Posted by yuri on 03/13/07 11:11
I could get rid of Compact Edition and learn the full edition, but my
program uses Compact Edition. Learning the full edition will only help me
sure, but Compact Edition is what will be used for the next couple of
applications. This is for the end user. I don't want to distribute Sql
Server Express along with the application, size is too big. Plus, I don't
need a Porsche to go across the street in record time. Compact Edition is
faster than Access but slower than Sql Server Express. Perfect for a small
distribution of my applications, with 0 price tag, small footprint, no
Jet/MDAC worries (deprecation/x64/distribution), etc..
<othellomy@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1173759013.236561.187470@64g2000cwx.googlegroups.com...
> On Mar 13, 3:09 am, "yuri" <yur...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>> > In other words, you're part of the generation that thinks all the
>> > answers
>> > on the Internet.
>>
>> OMG, heavens NO! I'm not that young. I wish I had this knowledge 20
>> years
>> ago. ;)
>>
>> I do have an extensive library on programming, artificial intelligence,
>> expert systems, etc. Approaching, 30 books and the dump has more.
>>
>> > Unfortunately a lot of the information on the Internet sucks.
>>
>> Hence, the question in the newsgroup.
>>
>> > Actually Joe as a couple of decent books out there, not sure how many
>> > are
>> > for true beginners.
>>
>> I don't need one for true beginners. I can get by. I need one for
>> intermediate to advanced. I hate the learn X in 21 days (Yea, right.)
>>
>> I prefer more advanced books.
>
> I recommend to get rid of compact edition and learn T-SQL full edition
> with all the features available.
>
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