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Mastering phpMyAdmin 3.4 for Effective MySQL Management

You're reading from   Mastering phpMyAdmin 3.4 for Effective MySQL Management A complete guide to getting started with phpMyAdmin 3.4 and mastering its features book and ebook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849517782
Length 394 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Mastering phpMyAdmin 3.4 for Effective MySQL Management
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
1. Preface
1. Getting Started with phpMyAdmin FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuring Authentication and Security 3. Over Viewing the Interface 4. Creating and Browsing Tables 5. Changing Data and Structure 6. Exporting Structure and Data (Backup) 7. Importing Structure and Data 8. Searching Data 9. Performing Table and Database Operations 10. Benefiting from the Relational System 11. Entering SQL Statements 12. Generating Multi-table Queries 13. Synchronizing Data and Supporting Replication 14. Using Query Bookmarks 15. Documenting the System 16. Transforming Data using MIME 17. Supporting Features Added in MySQL 5 18. Tracking Changes 19. Administrating the MySQL Server Troubleshooting and Support Index

Relational MySQL


When application developers use PHP and MySQL to build web interfaces or other data manipulation applications, they usually establish relations between tables using the underlying SQL queries. Examples of this would be queries to "get an invoice and all its items" and "get all books by an author".

In the earlier versions of phpMyAdmin, the relational data structure (how tables relate to each other) was not stored within MySQL. Tables were programmatically joined by the applications to generate meaningful results.

This was considered a shortcoming of MySQL by phpMyAdmin developers and users. Therefore, the team started to build an infrastructure to support relations for MyISAM tables, which is now called the phpMyAdmin configuration storage. The infrastructure evolved to support a growing array of special features such as query bookmarks and MIME-based transformations.

Now-a-days, relations between tables are normally defined natively with the FOREIGN KEY feature of the InnoDB...

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