Tntman 14 Posted October 13, 2020 Have anyone used Delphi with Tsql ? What are advantages and disadvantages in your opinion ? I would like to try Delphi with TSQL but there are no relevant resources to learn online, maybe im googling it wrong but as i can see there are not so many resources to learn from ( with examples etc ) Can somebody give me some resources where I can read and learn more about this ? Thank you Share this post Link to post
haentschman 92 Posted October 14, 2020 (edited) Hi... The question is...why you want the imho old TSQL instead of FireDAC, UNIDAC, Zeos? Edited October 14, 2020 by haentschman Share this post Link to post
Lars Fosdal 1792 Posted October 14, 2020 Are we talking about MS SQL Server T-SQL - or is there a TSQL class somewhere? Regardless of which - I'd say go for FireDAC. Share this post Link to post
Tntman 14 Posted October 14, 2020 3 hours ago, haentschman said: Hi... The question is...why you want the imho old TSQL instead of FireDAC, UNIDAC, Zeos? I found some delphi job online that says that candidates should know tsql.. I just wanted to check it out, i realized that it's pretty old stuff since there are not many examples online.. 1 hour ago, Lars Fosdal said: Are we talking about MS SQL Server T-SQL - or is there a TSQL class somewhere? Regardless of which - I'd say go for FireDAC. Yes, im talking about ms sql with t sql.. My bad i did not explained well in my first post.. Is there any older method except firedac Share this post Link to post
TigerLilly 16 Posted October 14, 2020 Not sure, why T-SQL is considered to be old. T-SQL (=Transact-SQL) is an enriched version of standard SQL, espescially for MS-SQL server. It is up to date and whoever issues SQL statements againstr a MS SQL server is heavy in T-SQL. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/language-reference?view=sql-server-ver15 Share this post Link to post
Jurandi 1 Posted October 18, 2020 T-Sql is the language for handling an MsSql database. If you want to do an ms-sql stored procedure to use in delphi or other language it should be in t-sql. If it were an Oracle DB it would be PlSql. In time: T-Sql is nothing old. Learn it. You just have to win. Sorry by my poor english. 1 Share this post Link to post
Uwe Raabe 2057 Posted October 18, 2020 On 10/14/2020 at 8:13 AM, Lars Fosdal said: is there a TSQL class somewhere? The old dbExpress components were named TSQL<something> Share this post Link to post
Tntman 14 Posted October 21, 2020 So can I install on my PC Mysql workbench for example and create DB file and than follow this tutorial -> to connect to database ? Also can I ship my .exe with that DB file to friend so he can use it? I mean i can obviously do that but is this a right way of doing things ? Share this post Link to post
Tom Chamberlain 47 Posted October 21, 2020 That tutorial is using SQL Lite as an embedded database and is a little different from using something like M$ SQL Server or MySQL where there is another service/process running that you are talking to. That service could be on your computer or on a server were multiple users are talking to it at the same time over a network. You can write SQL commands against them all, but the features and syntax for some functionally changes from database to database and some are not even available. If you want to use SQL Lite you do not need MySQL or M$ SQL Server, you can do everything with FireDAC. I have never used SQL Lite with FireDAC personally. (sometimes I miss the BDE and dbase days, I think I just aged myself) Check this comparison for a sample of just three of the free database out there:https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/sqlite-vs-mysql-vs-postgresql-a-comparison-of-relational-database-management-systems Also check out: http://docwiki.embarcadero.com/RADStudio/Sydney/en/Using_SQLite_with_FireDAC 1 Share this post Link to post
Tntman 14 Posted October 22, 2020 9 hours ago, Tom Chamberlain said: That tutorial is using SQL Lite as an embedded database and is a little different from using something like M$ SQL Server or MySQL where there is another service/process running that you are talking to. That service could be on your computer or on a server were multiple users are talking to it at the same time over a network. You can write SQL commands against them all, but the features and syntax for some functionally changes from database to database and some are not even available. If you want to use SQL Lite you do not need MySQL or M$ SQL Server, you can do everything with FireDAC. I have never used SQL Lite with FireDAC personally. (sometimes I miss the BDE and dbase days, I think I just aged myself) Check this comparison for a sample of just three of the free database out there:https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/sqlite-vs-mysql-vs-postgresql-a-comparison-of-relational-database-management-systems Also check out: http://docwiki.embarcadero.com/RADStudio/Sydney/en/Using_SQLite_with_FireDAC Ty for answering, yes i know that sqlite and ms are different but i was talking about approach to both databases.. I just posted this sqlite video because i did not find other for ms access.. So basically approach is to make a db file for ms access database and point its location on pc and application will talk to it and perform crud operations Share this post Link to post