Gnome has mysql-administrator for administering mysql but that is an administrator utility only, it doesn't seem to provide a way of creating tables etc.
Is there a Gnome GUI equivalent of the part of phpmyadmin that allows one to create tables, delete tables, display data, etc.?
On Nov 8, 2007 2:05 PM, Chris G cl@isbd.net wrote:
Gnome has mysql-administrator for administering mysql but that is an administrator utility only, it doesn't seem to provide a way of creating tables etc.
Is there a Gnome GUI equivalent of the part of phpmyadmin that allows one to create tables, delete tables, display data, etc.?
It's not GNOME, but MySQL provides GUIs for both WIndows and Linux
On Thursday 08 November 2007 1:12:17 pm Arthur Pemberton wrote:
On Nov 8, 2007 2:05 PM, Chris G cl@isbd.net wrote:
Gnome has mysql-administrator for administering mysql but that is an administrator utility only, it doesn't seem to provide a way of creating tables etc.
Is there a Gnome GUI equivalent of the part of phpmyadmin that allows one to create tables, delete tables, display data, etc.?
It's not GNOME, but MySQL provides GUIs for both WIndows and Linux
-- Fedora 7 : sipping some of that moonshine ( www.pembo13.com )
mysql-administrator most certainly does give you the ability to create tables, update tables, add indexes and anything else you can think of. This is its purpose for existence. I suggest you spend a little more time with it. Especially in the "Calalog" section.
On Thu, Nov 08, 2007 at 01:17:12PM -0700, Paul Lemmons wrote:
On Thursday 08 November 2007 1:12:17 pm Arthur Pemberton wrote:
On Nov 8, 2007 2:05 PM, Chris G cl@isbd.net wrote:
Gnome has mysql-administrator for administering mysql but that is an administrator utility only, it doesn't seem to provide a way of creating tables etc.
Is there a Gnome GUI equivalent of the part of phpmyadmin that allows one to create tables, delete tables, display data, etc.?
It's not GNOME, but MySQL provides GUIs for both WIndows and Linux
-- Fedora 7 : sipping some of that moonshine ( www.pembo13.com )
mysql-administrator most certainly does give you the ability to create tables, update tables, add indexes and anything else you can think of. This is its purpose for existence. I suggest you spend a little more time with it. Especially in the "Calalog" section.
You are absolutely right! Thank you. How did I miss that?
Chris G wrote:
It's not GNOME, but MySQL provides GUIs for both WIndows and Linux
The problem, which you'll likely notice if you use MySQL Administrator and/or MySQL Query Browser a lot, is that they give new definitions to the word unstable. In fact, both of them consistently crash KWin, KDesktop and Kicker on my system (but then again, so does the file dialog in Eclipse).
On Nov 8, 2007 10:51 PM, Kelly Miller lightsolphoenix@gmail.com wrote:
Chris G wrote:
It's not GNOME, but MySQL provides GUIs for both WIndows and Linux
The problem, which you'll likely notice if you use MySQL Administrator and/or MySQL Query Browser a lot, is that they give new definitions to the word unstable. In fact, both of them consistently crash KWin, KDesktop and Kicker on my system (but then again, so does the file dialog in Eclipse).
Agreed, caused me to switch to phpmyadmin.
On Thu, Nov 08, 2007 at 11:51:05PM -0500, Kelly Miller wrote:
Chris G wrote:
It's not GNOME, but MySQL provides GUIs for both WIndows and Linux
The problem, which you'll likely notice if you use MySQL Administrator and/or MySQL Query Browser a lot, is that they give new definitions to the word unstable. In fact, both of them consistently crash KWin, KDesktop and Kicker on my system (but then again, so does the file dialog in Eclipse).
It seems pretty stable on my fvwm2 desktop.