Author: Richard Staron
Edition:
Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 0201750775
Edition:
Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 0201750775
Guerrilla Oracle: The Succinct Windows Perspective
As Oracle has grown and developed and added new features, books about Oracle have likewise grown oversized and bloated and intimidating for the beginner. Get Guerrilla Oracle computer books for free.
This book is a succinct introduction to the overall features of Oracle. It does not get into great depth about any of those features. It is a tutorial in nature. The authors use an example database to teach readers how to turn a Windows server into an Oracle server, configure both the Oracle server and client PCs, enable remote access, work with "customers" on designing the database, normalize the data, turn the concepts into a real relational database, design the GUI forms, write the code, produce the reports, and then web enable the system. The reader will be the DBA, the programmer, and Check Guerrilla Oracle our best computer books for 2013. All books are available in pdf format and downloadable from rapidshare, 4shared, and mediafire.
Guerrilla Oracle Free
This book is a succinct introduction to the overall features of Oracle. It does not get into great depth about any of those features. It is a tutorial in nature. The authors use an example database to teach readers how to turn a Windows server into an Oracle server, configure both the Oracle server and client PCs, enable remote access, work with "customers" on designing the database, normalize the data, turn the concepts into a real relational database, design the GUI forms, write the code, produce the reports, and then web enable the system his book is a succinct introduction to the overall features of Oracle. It does not get into great depth about any of those features. It is a tutorial in nature. The authors use an example database to teach readers how to turn a Windows server into an Oracle server, configure both the Oracle server and client PCs, enable remote access, work with "customers" on designing the database, normalize the data, turn the concepts into a real relational database, design the GUI forms, write the code, produce the reports, and then web enable the system. The reader will be the DBA, the programmer, and
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