[nscerqueira] Some examples of tcl and sqlite usage: NOTE: the name of the database is opendb * Retrieve the names of the tables stored in a sqlite database: ====== package require sqlite3 sqlite3 opendb "database.db" ; # Open up an existing database or create a new empty one. set tableNames [opendb eval {SELECT tbl_name FROM sqlite_master}] puts $tableNames ====== * Retrieve the names of the columns stored in a sqlite database(variable columnName): ====== opendb eval "SELECT * FROM $tableName LIMIT 1" x {set columnName $x(*)} puts $columnName ====== [jnc] You can also use the `PRAGMA` statement `table_info(table_name`) to retrieve column information. See http://sqlite.org/pragma.html for a list of all `PRAGMA` statements. ====== set columns [opendb eval "PRAGMA table_info($tableName)"] puts $columns ====== * Retrieve the row data from a table ====== opendb eval "Select * FROM $i" values { set columnNames $values(*) set rowList {} foreach column $columnNames { lappend rowList $values($column) } puts $rowList } ====== [JOB] Anyone interested in some date arithmetics - the sqlite database can do it all! The classical '''days between date''' function the SQL way goes like this: ====== -- note: sqlite doesn't need select ... from dual SELECT julianday ( current_date ) - julianday( DATE('....-09-25')); ====== '[escargo] 2012-01-31' - Anybody have a clue on how to decipher the SQLite tables used by Firefox 3 bookmarks? I thought it might be easier to read the database directly rather than export HTML and then parse the result, but the structure is not documented anywhere I can find, and there seems to be no "how to" on how to navigate through all the tables. ---- !!!!!! %|[Category Example]|[Category Database]|% !!!!!!