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GeneralStored Procs, parameters and IN Clause Pin
stephen woolhead7-Nov-03 5:00
stephen woolhead7-Nov-03 5:00 
GeneralRe: Stored Procs, parameters and IN Clause Pin
jeff_martin11-Nov-03 12:04
jeff_martin11-Nov-03 12:04 
GeneralSQL Server does not exist or access denied Pin
yyf7-Nov-03 2:50
yyf7-Nov-03 2:50 
GeneralProblem with _Connection::Open ! Pin
nigs_krec7-Nov-03 1:53
nigs_krec7-Nov-03 1:53 
GeneralManaged .NET Embedded Database Pin
Andrew Shapira6-Nov-03 10:11
Andrew Shapira6-Nov-03 10:11 
GeneralRe: Managed .NET Embedded Database Pin
Mike Dimmick7-Nov-03 2:54
Mike Dimmick7-Nov-03 2:54 
GeneralRe: Managed .NET Embedded Database Pin
Andrew Shapira7-Nov-03 10:17
Andrew Shapira7-Nov-03 10:17 
GeneralRe: Managed .NET Embedded Database Pin
Arjan Einbu10-Nov-03 11:01
Arjan Einbu10-Nov-03 11:01 
GeneralRe: Managed .NET Embedded Database Pin
Andrew Shapira10-Nov-03 13:57
Andrew Shapira10-Nov-03 13:57 
GeneralMax Pool Size's Limitation Pin
yyf6-Nov-03 8:43
yyf6-Nov-03 8:43 
GeneralCreating a DBASE file Pin
DonBush6-Nov-03 4:04
DonBush6-Nov-03 4:04 
GeneralRe: Creating a DBASE file Pin
Jörgen Sigvardsson6-Nov-03 14:00
Jörgen Sigvardsson6-Nov-03 14:00 
GeneralRe: Creating a DBASE file Pin
DonBush7-Nov-03 2:33
DonBush7-Nov-03 2:33 
GeneralRe: Creating a DBASE file Pin
Jörgen Sigvardsson7-Nov-03 3:14
Jörgen Sigvardsson7-Nov-03 3:14 
GeneralRe: Creating a DBASE file Pin
DonBush7-Nov-03 4:10
DonBush7-Nov-03 4:10 
GeneralRe: Creating a DBASE file Pin
Arjan Einbu10-Nov-03 11:07
Arjan Einbu10-Nov-03 11:07 
GeneralRe: Creating a DBASE file Pin
DonBush11-Nov-03 2:47
DonBush11-Nov-03 2:47 
QuestionMust be a permissions thing, but what? Pin
Colin Angus Mackay6-Nov-03 4:04
Colin Angus Mackay6-Nov-03 4:04 
Answer(Actually it wasn't) Pin
Colin Angus Mackay6-Nov-03 5:33
Colin Angus Mackay6-Nov-03 5:33 
It was a date thing. At some point a particular user got set to "British English" rather than just "English"???? And it flipped the month and days around.

Now... (perhaps I should go off to the soapbox at this point) WHY THE $&*% is American localisation formats called "English" and British localisation formats called "British English". If someone said this date is in "English" format I'd expect the format to be the one used in England. Makes Sense? Doesn't it?! But oooohhh! noooooo! in SQL Server 2000 "English" format dates mean the format of dates used in the United States of America! (which is about 3000 miles from England).

Aaaarrrrrrggghhhh!


--Colin Mackay--

"In the confrontation between the stream and the rock, the stream always wins - not through strength but perseverance." (H. Jackson Brown)


GeneralRe: (Actually it wasn't) Pin
Michael Dunn6-Nov-03 13:01
sitebuilderMichael Dunn6-Nov-03 13:01 
GeneralRe: (Actually it wasn't) Pin
Jörgen Sigvardsson6-Nov-03 13:58
Jörgen Sigvardsson6-Nov-03 13:58 
GeneralRe: (Actually it wasn't) Pin
Colin Angus Mackay7-Nov-03 1:37
Colin Angus Mackay7-Nov-03 1:37 
GeneralRe: (Actually it wasn't) Pin
Jörgen Sigvardsson7-Nov-03 3:11
Jörgen Sigvardsson7-Nov-03 3:11 
AnswerRe: Must be a permissions thing, but what? Pin
Giles7-Nov-03 3:49
Giles7-Nov-03 3:49 
GeneralRe: Must be a permissions thing, but what? Pin
Colin Angus Mackay7-Nov-03 5:10
Colin Angus Mackay7-Nov-03 5:10 

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