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A really stupid problem with SQL

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  • D Dan Pomerchik

    Ahh thanks. And what about ADO ? Does it work with % or must use * too ?

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    James T Johnson
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    That I'm not sure about, I think it uses * for Access and % for others, but I'm not sure as I haven't done any ADO on Access. Oddly that was one combination I was able to avoid. James Sonork: Hasaki "I left there in the morning with their God tucked underneath my arm their half-assed smiles and the book of rules. So I asked this God a question and by way of firm reply, He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays." "Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971

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    • J James T Johnson

      That I'm not sure about, I think it uses * for Access and % for others, but I'm not sure as I haven't done any ADO on Access. Oddly that was one combination I was able to avoid. James Sonork: Hasaki "I left there in the morning with their God tucked underneath my arm their half-assed smiles and the book of rules. So I asked this God a question and by way of firm reply, He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays." "Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971

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      Mazdak
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      James T. Johnson wrote: but I'm not sure as I haven't done any ADO on Access I used it.You have to use % .:) Mazy "The path you tread is narrow and the drop is shear and very high, The ravens all are watching from a vantage point near by, Apprehension creeping like a choo-train uo your spine, Will the tightrope reach the end;will the final cuplet rhyme?"Cymbaline-Pink Floyd

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      • D Dan Pomerchik

        Ahh thanks. And what about ADO ? Does it work with % or must use * too ?

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        Mazdak
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        Dan Pomerchik wrote: And what about ADO ? Does it work with % or must use * too ? In ADO You have to use % .:) Mazy "The path you tread is narrow and the drop is shear and very high, The ravens all are watching from a vantage point near by, Apprehension creeping like a choo-train uo your spine, Will the tightrope reach the end;will the final cuplet rhyme?"Cymbaline-Pink Floyd

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        • M Mazdak

          Dan Pomerchik wrote: And what about ADO ? Does it work with % or must use * too ? In ADO You have to use % .:) Mazy "The path you tread is narrow and the drop is shear and very high, The ravens all are watching from a vantage point near by, Apprehension creeping like a choo-train uo your spine, Will the tightrope reach the end;will the final cuplet rhyme?"Cymbaline-Pink Floyd

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          Dan Pomerchik
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          Oh this is crap, every time you have to use a different character :omg: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? Anyway thanks guys, good to have some people who help :-)

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          • D Dan Pomerchik

            Oh this is crap, every time you have to use a different character :omg: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? Anyway thanks guys, good to have some people who help :-)

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            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            Dan Pomerchik wrote: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? How do you think they keep us on our feet? :)

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            • D Dan Pomerchik

              Oh this is crap, every time you have to use a different character :omg: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? Anyway thanks guys, good to have some people who help :-)

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              Nick Parker
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              Dan Pomerchik wrote: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? How do you think they keep us on our feet? :) Don't you hate it when you forget to log on with the message boards? Nick Parker

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              • D Dan Pomerchik

                Oh this is crap, every time you have to use a different character :omg: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? Anyway thanks guys, good to have some people who help :-)

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                James T Johnson
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                There is a standard, %, I don't know if its in writing but everything I've seen except Access uses it :) Access (and DAO) is used on windows only, so it made sense to use * as the 'match anything wildcard' which is what windows uses. James Sonork: Hasaki "I left there in the morning with their God tucked underneath my arm their half-assed smiles and the book of rules. So I asked this God a question and by way of firm reply, He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays." "Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971

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                • D Dan Pomerchik

                  Well , I wrote a little app in VB that queries a table. I used DAO.I created a SQL generator that builds up a statement. But somehow only if I use * instead of % it works. For example , if i execute

                  select * from Phonebook where Firstname like 'M*'

                  I will get the appropriate records beginning with M. but if i write:

                  select * from Phonebook where Firstname like 'M%'

                  than all i get is an empty recordset! Why is that?! i remember that i used % before and it worked just fine. maybe someone knows what is the problem? thx!

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                  Carlos Antollini
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  Because * replace the rest of characters and % replace only One Character.... For Example if you have a table with the following records Mother My Mine M* get all the records and M% only the Second Record... Best Regards Carlos Antollini. Sonork ID 100.10529 cantollini

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                  • C Carlos Antollini

                    Because * replace the rest of characters and % replace only One Character.... For Example if you have a table with the following records Mother My Mine M* get all the records and M% only the Second Record... Best Regards Carlos Antollini. Sonork ID 100.10529 cantollini

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                    Mazdak
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    :eek: :eek: Carlos Antollini wrote: M% only the Second Record... No,Carlos.Thats not true.'%' get all of them too.:) Mazy "The path you tread is narrow and the drop is shear and very high, The ravens all are watching from a vantage point near by, Apprehension creeping like a choo-train uo your spine, Will the tightrope reach the end;will the final cuplet rhyme?"Cymbaline-Pink Floyd

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                    • M Mazdak

                      :eek: :eek: Carlos Antollini wrote: M% only the Second Record... No,Carlos.Thats not true.'%' get all of them too.:) Mazy "The path you tread is narrow and the drop is shear and very high, The ravens all are watching from a vantage point near by, Apprehension creeping like a choo-train uo your spine, Will the tightrope reach the end;will the final cuplet rhyme?"Cymbaline-Pink Floyd

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                      Carlos Antollini
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      Mazy It's True... :-O I found the following: Kind of match Pattern Match (returns True) No match (returns False) Multiple characters a*a aa, aBa, aBBBa *ab* abc, AABB, Xab aZb, bac Special character a[*]a a*a aaa Multiple characters ab* abcdefg, abc cab, aab Single character a?a aaa, a3a, aBa aBBBa Single digit a#a a0a, a1a, a2a aaa, a10a Range of characters [a-z] f, p, j 2, & Outside a range [!a-z] 9, &, % b, a Not a digit [!0-9] A, a, &, ~ 0, 1, 9 Combined a[!b-m]# An9, az0, a99 abc, aj0 Best Regards....;) Carlos Antollini. Sonork ID 100.10529 cantollini

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                      • C Carlos Antollini

                        Because * replace the rest of characters and % replace only One Character.... For Example if you have a table with the following records Mother My Mine M* get all the records and M% only the Second Record... Best Regards Carlos Antollini. Sonork ID 100.10529 cantollini

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                        Nick Parker
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        In T-SQL (SQL Server) the % character will do a wildcard beyond that point(all characters)

                        'boo%' results in book, books, boobs....

                        the _ character will act as a single wildcard

                        'b_ok' will find anything for the second character(i.e. - book). Nick Parker

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                        • C Carlos Antollini

                          Because * replace the rest of characters and % replace only One Character.... For Example if you have a table with the following records Mother My Mine M* get all the records and M% only the Second Record... Best Regards Carlos Antollini. Sonork ID 100.10529 cantollini

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                          Dan Pomerchik
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          Oh thanks a lot , that explains everything :-) :-) - Dan "Intel inside - Idiot outside"

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                          • N Nick Parker

                            Dan Pomerchik wrote: Why can't they just SET a STANDARD and USE it in all db's/platforms/etc.!? How do you think they keep us on our feet? :) Don't you hate it when you forget to log on with the message boards? Nick Parker

                            D Offline
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                            Dan Pomerchik
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            Nick Parker wrote: How do you think they keep us on our feet? :-) Nick Parker wrote: Don't you hate it when you forget to log on with the message boards? Actually, I'm allowing those cookies so I don't have to log on :-) Btw, I tried to change the default password I got and somehow it won't change. Does anyone knows something about it ? - Dan "Intel inside - Idiot outside"

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                            • D Dan Pomerchik

                              Well , I wrote a little app in VB that queries a table. I used DAO.I created a SQL generator that builds up a statement. But somehow only if I use * instead of % it works. For example , if i execute

                              select * from Phonebook where Firstname like 'M*'

                              I will get the appropriate records beginning with M. but if i write:

                              select * from Phonebook where Firstname like 'M%'

                              than all i get is an empty recordset! Why is that?! i remember that i used % before and it worked just fine. maybe someone knows what is the problem? thx!

                              D Offline
                              D Offline
                              Dan Pomerchik
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #17

                              Dammit! I'm totaly confused now! Someone said that % is for one char and * for all. Someone else said % is standard and * for DAO/ADO. What happening!? :-) - Dan "Intel inside - Idiot outside"

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