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table_type [2020/02/10 21:23] admin [Table Type] |
table_type [2020/02/10 21:25] admin [Table Type] |
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[{{ :editors:table_internals.png?nolink |Table Internals}}] | [{{ :editors:table_internals.png?nolink |Table Internals}}] | ||
- | <note tip>The Dinamica documentation and error messages usually express a table format as a sequence of those column names/types separated by commas. For example, the sequence “City_Id*#real, City_Population#real, City_Name#string” corresponds to a table with one key column and two value/data column. The key column is named “City_Id” with type Real Value Type and the data/value columns are named “City_Population” and “City_Name” with types Real Value Type and String Type, respectively. It is also possible to omit the column names and represent the previous table format as “*#real, #real, #string”. | + | <note tip> |
- | When stored as [[wp>Comma-separated_values]] files, tables may also use the column name/type syntax to represent the column attributes — the name, the indication whether it is key or data/value column, and its data type.</note> | + | The Dinamica documentation and error messages usually express a table format as a sequence of column names/types separated by commas. |
+ | \\ | ||
+ | For example, the sequence “City_Id*#real, City_Population#real, City_Name#string” corresponds to a table with one key column and two value/data column. The key column is named “City_Id” with type Real Value Type and the data/value columns are named “City_Population” and “City_Name” with types Real Value Type and String Type, respectively. | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | It is also possible to omit the column names and represent the previous table format as “*#real, #real, #string”. | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | When stored as [[wp>Comma-separated_values]] files, tables may also use the column name/type syntax to represent the column attributes — the name, the indication whether it is key or data/value column, and its data type. | ||
+ | </note> | ||
===== GUI Editor ===== | ===== GUI Editor ===== | ||