The examples in this book are based on source code and sample data
from two distributions named recipes
and mcb-kjv
that are available at the
MySQL Cookbook companion web site (see Preface).
Visit the site at this address:
http://www.kitebird.com/mysql-cookbook/ |
The recipes
distribution is the
primary source of examples. It’s available as a compressed tar file (recipes.tar.gz) or as a ZIP file (recipes.zip). Either distribution format when
unpacked creates a directory named recipes.
The recipes
distribution
contains programs as shown in the book, but in many cases also includes
implementations in additional languages. For example, a script shown in
the book using Python may be available in the recipes
distribution in Perl, Ruby, PHP, or
Java as well. This may save you some translation effort should you want
to convert a program as shown in the book to a different
language.
The Kitebird site provides access to the mcb-kjv
distribution, which contains the text
of the King James Version of the Bible, formatted suitably for loading
into MySQL. It’s used in Chapter 5, as the source
of a reasonably large body of text for examples that demonstrate
FULLTEXT
searches, and occasionally
elsewhere in the book. This distribution is provided separately from the
recipes
distribution due to its size.
It’s available as a compressed tar
file (mcb-kjv.tar.gz) or as a ZIP
file (mcb-kjv.zip). Either
distribution format when unpacked creates a directory named mcb-kjv.
The mcb-kjv
distribution was
derived from KJV text originally obtained from the Unbound Bible site
(http://www.unboundbible.org).
I have restructured that text to be more usable for the examples in this
book. The mcb-kjv
distribution
includes notes that describe the modifications that I made.
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