[nycphp-talk] naming identifiers
webmaster at vbplusme.com
webmaster at vbplusme.com
Sun Aug 30 11:12:39 EDT 2009
Hello Kristina,
Sunday, August 30, 2009, 10:05:44 PM, you wrote:
> Bev,
> Good morning to you as well! I'd imagine that yes, the table-creation
> widget inside phpMyAdmin probably does execute the queries that way, as
> that seems to be its default mode. I'm not sure if you can change
> settings to remove that behavior...
> There are a lot of reasons to like phpMyAdmin (well, a few reasons at
> least) but also a lot of reasons to hate it. For instance, once the
> database reaches a certain size, you won't be able to back it up using
> phpMyAdmin, but will have to use the command line. That's sort of lame.
> At the bare minimum, if you're going to use phpMyAdmin to create
> tables, do it in raw SQL instead of using the widget.
> PS I'm wondering what my mother would say if she knew I spent basically
> my entire weekend talking about databases..."that's no way to find a
> husband, Kristina" is what she'd probably say...and she's probably
> right. Lucky thing I'm not looking for one....!
> :) Kristina
>> Good Morning Kristina,
>>
>> Kristina D. H. Anderson wrote:
>> > phpMyAdmin often puts those funny sideways leaning
> apostrophes/quotes --
>> > ` -- around table names and field names when it writes its
> queries.
>> > You want to remove those before you create or change any table or
> field
>> > names, I think is what he means in practical terms. That way you
> will
>> > get errors on reserved words.
>>
>> I've seen those odd little quotes on the few occasions that I've used
>> phpMySQL to create queries, but the thing is I didn't use that when I
>> created the tables--I just used the little text field on the main db
>> page to give it a name, then entered how many fields I wanted and
>> clicked "Go". So it must have inserted them behind the scenes.
>>
>> > Also you can try to avoid your own confusion by giving longer, more
>> > detailed names to fields. Some people hate this idea but to me a
>> > little extra typing is worth the clarity.
>>
>> Amen to that! That's exactly what I'm doing these days. If a field
> name
>> doesn't warrant an underscore, then I have to be 100% sure that it's
> not
>> a reserved word--if I'm not sure, then I check. There is no way I want
>> to repeat that suffering again.
>>
>> Bev
>>
>>
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I use backticks all time to avoid ambiguity in Database and Table
names. I have never had any problem with them but I HAVE had problems
with not using them in the past where the mysql on the server that I
was using didn't like queries that didn't have them, go figure?
--
Best regards,
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