en-lines-train-1

Universal Dependencies - English - LinES

LanguageEnglish
ProjectLinES
Corpus Parttrain
AnnotationAhrenberg, Lars

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Certain ANSI-89 SQL features are not implemented and the wildcard characters conform to the Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) specification, not SQL. ANSI-92 provides new reserved words, syntax rules, and wildcard characters that enhance your ability to create queries, filters, and SQL statements. This mode conforms closely to the ANSI-92 Level 1 specification, but is not ANSI-92 Level 1 compliant. This query mode has more of the ANSI syntax, and the wildcard characters conform to the SQL specification. In Microsoft Access 2000 using ADOX, you could programmatically create queries that used ANSI-92 SQL syntax. However, any queries you created were not visible in the Database window because there was no option to set this mode in the user interface. Now in Access 2002, you can set the ANSI SQL query mode through the user interface for the current database and as the default setting for new databases. Why use ANSI-92 SQL? You may want to use ANSI-92 SQL for the following reasons: You anticipate upsizing your application in the future to an Access project and want to create queries that will run with minimal changes in a Microsoft SQL Server database. You want to take advantage of the new features not found in ANSI-89 SQL, such as:

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