Linux guy seeks help w/MS Access/Python
Alex Martelli
alex at magenta.com
Tue Aug 22 04:29:23 EDT 2000
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Tue Aug 22 04:29:23 EDT 2000
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<mksql at my-deja.com> wrote in message news:p304qscihjr0mppktp22us299eppfgva55 at 4ax.com... [snip] > Most often, I have used Python with Access databases to convert the > data into a more useful form (like _ASCII_), so that the data and > views can be ported into a more robust platform. As a matter of fact, Nowadays one would probably use XML as the intermediate 'more useful form' for porting, since it's easily transformed (XSLT) and imported by all kinds of platforms. ADO 2.5 (the current version) makes it even easier to handle XML, by the way. > The combination of Python, Pythonwin, and the DAO/ADO/ADOX COM > libraries made this task nearly easy! I have not used VB since. Since I discovered Python, my only use for VB has been [a] patching together a q&d gui (I prefer dynamic HTML, but for patching together a rough gui in 10 minutes VB's IDE is fast...), [b] testing that my components are indeed VB-interoperable (since I release Automation components that need to be callable from anywhere, VB foremost). One does need 'just enough VB do get by', for the sole reason that the docs that come with every kind of COM/Automation object models always assume VB is going to be the controller, and so use VB syntax in the examples &tc. But, fortunately, that doesn't mean having to USE the thing -- just surviving the need to read a few lines of code expressed in its syntax:-). Alex
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