Difference between revisions of "Compress/Decompress scripts"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | The "GZIP" program is here a built-in function. I guess other file types can be compressed in a .gzip-archive but what do I know? | + | The "GZIP" program is here a built-in function. I guess that other file types (than SQL scripts) can be compressed in a .gzip-archive but what do I know? |
Scripts are usually used to upgrade forest databases, more described here [http://heureka.resgeom.slu.se/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Database_scripts], but can also be executed in a result database, in SQL Server Management Studio, to derive results (if you don't succeed in viewing results in "Tables, Diagrams, and Reports"). But maybe this refer to other scripts, or maybe a temporary functionality used by the programmers? | Scripts are usually used to upgrade forest databases, more described here [http://heureka.resgeom.slu.se/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Database_scripts], but can also be executed in a result database, in SQL Server Management Studio, to derive results (if you don't succeed in viewing results in "Tables, Diagrams, and Reports"). But maybe this refer to other scripts, or maybe a temporary functionality used by the programmers? |
Latest revision as of 17:09, 10 September 2009
The "GZIP" program is here a built-in function. I guess that other file types (than SQL scripts) can be compressed in a .gzip-archive but what do I know?
Scripts are usually used to upgrade forest databases, more described here [1], but can also be executed in a result database, in SQL Server Management Studio, to derive results (if you don't succeed in viewing results in "Tables, Diagrams, and Reports"). But maybe this refer to other scripts, or maybe a temporary functionality used by the programmers?