i have a problem in inserting the listbox value into mysql database in vb 2008 i.e
if i select a video file i.e D:\videos\video1.mpg and add a msgbox() event before inserting into data base it shows the exact path i.e D:\videos\video1.mpg but when i check my database it shows me as D:videosvideo1.mpg how can i solve that
Within MySQL string values the backslash is interpreted as an escape character. The following escape sequences have special meaning to MySQL: \0, \', \", \b, \n, \r, \t, \z, \, \%, \_. Any other character preceeded by a backslash is just replaced with that character. So in your example: \v is not a valid escape sequence so it is replaced with just "v" when it is stored. You should alter your path values to contain the "\" sequence to actually store a backslash. Example: D:\\videos\\video1.mpg
try to insert path with two backslash signs, for example "D:\\videos\\video1.mpg" into database.
Related
I am working on macOS, not iOS, XCode 11.
My app allows in a specific location to enter text. This text can be anything. Once done it exports a csv which will be passed to an external process i cannot influence.
The issue: the external process uses semicolon ";" as a separator (csv is separated differently). If the user writes semicolon the external process will fail.
If I manually add an escaping backslash before each semicolon to the csv and then pass it to the external app it works.
What I need: having each semicolon escaped with ONE backslash in the final csv
What I tried
Escaping the whole text with quotation marks - fail
Escaping semicolons in objective-c before writing csv by trying
stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString (look for #";" replace with #"\;" - compiler throws a warning that escape character is unknown - fail
Appreciate any help
UPDATE:
I also tried to set a double backslash like #Corbell mentioned but this leads in a double backslash in the exported CSV -> fail
I also tried to set a single backslash by using its unicode character:
[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%C;",0x5C]; --> "\\;"
Also failed and produces two backslashes in the final CSV (where i need ONE only).
In your stringByReplacingOccurencesOfString call, second parameter, try escaping your backslash with a backslash to make it a literal character to insert, i.e. #"\\;" - otherwise the compiler thinks you're trying to specify #"\;" as an escape sequence (backslash-semicolon) which is invalid.
Solved. It was the CSV Parser that added additional escaping characters. Once solved that it worked like a charm.
I'm running a SQL query in PowerShell using the SQLCMD, one of the posts shows how to use TAB as a separator. I'd like to have a fancier sequence of characters such as TAB-Comma-Space or Tab-Comma-Tab.
I've tried
-s `"`t,`t`"
-s `"`t`, `"
but it still uses a single Tab as the separator.
Thanks in advance.
Not possible according to the documentation.
-s col_separator
Specifies the column-separator character. The default is a blank space. This option sets the sqlcmd scripting variable SQLCMDCOLSEP. To use characters that have special meaning to the operating system such as the ampersand (&), or semicolon (;), enclose the character in quotation marks ("). The column separator can be any 8-bit character.
You might want to think about using a character like the hat/caret (^) as your delimiter and mass replacing that in the output. Not sure what single character would be least likely to conflict with your dataset.
From within an Oracle 11g database, using SQL, I need to remove the following sequence of special characters from a string, i.e.
~!##$%^&*()_+=\{}[]:”;’<,>./?
If any of these characters exist within a string, except for these two characters, which I DO NOT want removed, i.e.: "|" and "-" then I would like them completely removed.
For example:
From: 'ABC(D E+FGH?/IJK LMN~OP' To: 'ABCD EFGHIJK LMNOP' after removal of special characters.
I have tried this small test which works for this sample, i.e:
select regexp_replace('abc+de)fg','\+|\)') from dual
but is there a better means of using my sequence of special characters above without doing this string pattern of '\+|\)' for every special character using Oracle SQL?
You can replace anything other than letters and space with empty string
[^a-zA-Z ]
here is online demo
As per below comments
I still need to keep the following two special characters within my string, i.e. "|" and "-".
Just exclude more
[^a-zA-Z|-]
Note: hyphen - should be in the starting or ending or escaped like \- because it has special meaning in the Character class to define a range.
For more info read about Character Classes or Character Sets
Consider using this regex replacement instead:
REGEXP_REPLACE('abc+de)fg', '[~!##$%^&*()_+=\\{}[\]:”;’<,>.\/?]', '')
The replacement will match any character from your list.
Here is a regex demo!
The regex to match your sequence of special characters is:
[]~!##$%^&*()_+=\{}[:”;’<,>./?]+
I feel you still missed to escape all regex-special characters.
To achieve that, go iteratively:
build a test-tring and start to build up your regex-string character by character to see if it removes what you expect to be removed.
If the latest character does not work you have to escape it.
That should do the trick.
SELECT TRANSLATE('~!##$%sdv^&*()_+=\dsv{}[]:”;’<,>dsvsdd./?', '~!##$%^&*()_+=\{}[]:”;’<,>./?',' ')
FROM dual;
result:
TRANSLATE
-------------
sdvdsvdsvsdd
SQL> select translate('abc+de#fg-hq!m', 'a+-#!', etc.) from dual;
TRANSLATE(
----------
abcdefghqm
I am using SQL Server 2008. I have a table with the following column:
sampleData (nvarchar(max))
The value for this column in some of these rows are lists formatted as follows:
["value1","value2","value3"]
I'm trying to write a simple query that will return all rows with lists formatted like this, by just detecting the opening bracket.
SELECT * from sampleTable where sampleData like '[%'
The above query doesn't work, because '[' is a special character. How can I escape the bracket so my query does what I want?
... like '[[]%'
You use [ ] to surround a special character (or range).
See the section "Using Wildcard Characters As Literals" in SQL Server LIKE
Note: You don't need to escape the closing bracket...
Aside from gbn's answer, the other method is to use the ESCAPE option:
SELECT * from sampleTable where sampleData like '\[%' ESCAPE '\'
See the documentation for details.
Just a further note here...
If you want to include the bracket (or other specials) within a set of characters, you only have the option of using ESCAPE (since you are already using the brackets to indicate the set).
Also you must specify the ESCAPE clause, since there is no default escape character (it isn't backslash by default as I first thought, coming from a C background).
E.g., if I want to pull out rows where a column contains anything outside of a set of 'acceptable' characters, for the sake of argument let's say alphanumerics... we might start with this:
SELECT * FROM MyTest WHERE MyCol LIKE '%[^a-zA-Z0-9]%'
So we are returning anything that has any character not in the list (due to the leading caret ^ character).
If we then want to add special characters in this set of acceptable characters, we cannot nest the brackets, so we must use an escape character, like this...
SELECT * FROM MyTest WHERE MyCol LIKE '%[^a-zA-Z0-9\[\]]%' ESCAPE '\'
Preceding the brackets (individually) with a backslash and indicating that we are using backslash for the escape character allows us to escape them within the functioning brackets indicating the set of characters.
I need a complete list of characters that should be escaped in sql string parameters to prevent exceptions. I assume that I need to replace all the offending characters with the escaped version before I pass it to my ObjectDataSource filter parameter.
No, the ObjectDataSource will handle all the escaping for you. Any parametrized query will also require no escaping.
As others have pointed out, in 99% of the cases where someone thinks they need to ask this question, they are doing it wrong. Parameterization is the way to go. If you really need to escape yourself, try to find out if your DB access library offers a function for this (for example, MySQL has mysql_real_escape_string).
SQL Books online:
Search for String Literals:
String Literals
A string literal consists of zero or more characters surrounded by quotation marks. If a string contains quotation marks, these must be escaped in order for the expression to parse. Any two-byte character except \x0000 is permitted in a string, because the \x0000 character is the null terminator of a string.
Strings can include other characters that require an escape sequence. The following table lists escape sequences for string literals.
\a
Alert
\b
Backspace
\f
Form feed
\n
New line
\r
Carriage return
\t
Horizontal tab
\v
Vertical tab
\"
Quotation mark
\
Backslash
\xhhhh
Unicode character in hexadecimal notation
Here's a way I used to get rid of apostrophes. You could do the same thing with other offending characters that you run into. (example in VB.Net)
Dim companyFilter = Trim(Me.ddCompany.SelectedValue)
If (Me.ddCompany.SelectedIndex > 0) Then
filterString += String.Format("LegalName like '{0}'", companyFilter.Replace("'", "''"))
End If
Me.objectDataSource.FilterExpression = filterString
Me.displayGrid.DataBind()