|
Posted by Mikey on 07/20/05 22:42
Ross wrote:
>Hi all,
>
>I am trying to create a table on the remote server but it never seems to
>work
>
>CREATE TABLE `sheet1` (
> `id` int(10) NOT NULL auto_increment,
> `title` varchar(255) NOT NULL default '',
> `fname` varchar(255) NOT NULL default '',
> `sname` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `job_title` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `organisation` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `email` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `street` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `city` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `postcode` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `office_tel` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `mobile` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `fax` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `web` varchar(255) default NULL,
> `add_info` varchar(255) default NULL,
> PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
>) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 AUTO_INCREMENT=303 ;
>
>
>There seems to be a problem with the last line (this is exported from my
>local server). I am just learning about mySql as I go so have no real clue
>about CHARSET and ENGINE (which I believe may be the problem)
>
>This is the error
>
>1064 - You have an error in your SQL syntax. Check the manual that
>corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near
>'DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 AUTO_INCREMENT=303' at line 18
>
>and this is what the manual says (not very helpful)
>
>a.. Error: 1064 SQLSTATE: 42000 (ER_PARSE_ERROR)
>
>Message: %s near '%s' at line %d
>
>
>Any help will be appreciated.
>
>R.
>
>
>
If you have phpMyAdmin installed, create the table there and then export
the table structure - I have found this to be very reliable in the past.
Mikey
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|