I'm not sure if this relates to your problem, but I couldn't connect to an ODBC data source from Zope. I found that the problem was that I'd created the data source as a "User DSN" . As a "System DSN" (the second tab in the ODBC dialog), my data source was accessible. "Larry Bates" <lbates at syscon-computers.com> wrote in message news:3ae9800f$1 at news.dbtech.net... > I have been trying off and on for the last couple of weeks to get connected > to ODBC from a Python application. I have tried ODBC and mxODBC with no > success. When I try to connect to DSN the CPU utilization on my machine > goes to 100% and the application never finishes. Can anyone help a newbie > get past this seemingly insurmountable hurdle? I have a lot of projects > that I want to do, but access to ODBC data source is going to be a > requirement for most of them. > > Thanks in advance, > Larry Bates > > > Config: > > Windows 98 (w/all patches applied from Windows Update) > 128Mb > ActiveState Python 2.0, build 203 > > >
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4