So you are writing an OLE DB provider? I'm going to have to set up an altar
to you at my house... ;)
I know it may be a stupid question, but are they overly hard? I mean, if
you have a lot of connectivity code already existent in the ODBC and libpq,
does it make the job a lot easier?
Adam Lang
Systems Engineer
Rutgers Casualty Insurance Company
----- Original Message -----
From: "Clark, Joel" <jclark@lendingtree.com>
To: "'Magnus Hagander'" <mha@sollentuna.net>; "'Adam Lang'"
<aalang@rutgersinsurance.com>; "pgsql-interfaces"
<pgsql-interfaces@postgresql.org>
Sent: Wednesday, November 01, 2000 3:31 PM
Subject: RE: [INTERFACES] Connecting remotely.
> I have created a project on greatbridge's site (www.greatbridge.org) to do
> just that (assuming life doesn't get in the way). I have not started yet,
> so I can't really give specifics. It will be written C++ (MS Visual C++ 6
> to be exact, since that is what I have) using MS's SDK (downloadable from
> MSDN).
>
> Joel
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Magnus Hagander [mailto:mha@sollentuna.net]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 01, 2000 12:12 PM
> To: 'Adam Lang'; pgsql-interfaces
> Subject: RE: [INTERFACES] Connecting remotely.
>
>
> > As for the ole db... does anyone have an idea where to start
> > looking for that info?
>
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?URL=/library/psdk/dasdk/oled0c
> s7.htm
>
> > Would it have to be written in C? I found a
> > company that sells
> > software that creates ole dbs...
> It shuold be possible to write it in any language that can produce COM
> objects which support the OLE-DB interfaces (there are lots of them). C++
is
> probably the most common langauge used, but there are examples in Java and
> Visual Basic as well (samples available at
>
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?URL=/library/psdk/dasdk/osp298
> xb.htm).
>
> //Magnus