MySQL Books
-
Beginning MySQL Database Design and Optimization: From Novice to Professional
Published 16 years ago includes sample chapter
by Chad Russell, Jon Stephens, Apress
Apress has done what many other publishers have failed to do by providing an excellent series of "Novice to Professional" books. This book is pretty much a "must have" for a MySQL programmer looking to bridge the gap between novice and professional. Beginning MySQL Database Design and Optimization is a great book for MySQL users who already know the basics and want to improve their use of MySQL.
-
Beginning PHP 5 and MySQL: From Novice to Professional
Published 16 years ago includes sample chapter
by W. Jason Gilmore, Apress
I can report that Gilmore and Apress have given the world one book that will replace many other PHP and MySQL volumes. This is one that the reader will consistently rely on and keep near to hand. I can summarize this review in nine words: If you want to learn PHP, buy this book. ...an extremely detailed book. — Richard Testani, Apple-Sauce.
-
The Definitive Guide to MySQL, Second Edition
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Michael Kofler, Apress
(Michael Kofler) did the hard work of taking the documentation and sifting through it to bring the useful parts together clearly and concisely. Definitive indeed. — Craig Maloney, Slashdot Contributor This second edition of Michael Kofler's acclaimed MySQL book has updated and expanded to cover MySQL 4.0, the most recent production release of the popular open source database, which boasts more than 4 million users worldwide.
-
Programmer's Guide to SQL
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Cristian Darie, Karli Watson, Apress
The Programmer's Guide to SQL provides an in-depth yet concise tutorial on the use of Structured Query Language (SQL). Once you've mastered the fundamentals, the book serves as a handy desktop reference on SQL usage, covering all of the major SQL statements that you'll need when programming databases. It also comes complete with example code for five major database systems: SQL Server, Oracle, DB2, MySQL, and Access.
-
The Dreamweaver Developer's Instant Troubleshooter
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Nancy Gill, Gareth Downes-Powell, Rachel Andrew, Drew McLellan, Kevin Marshall, Apress
The Dreamweaver Developer's Instant Troubleshooter focuses on the problems common to complex areas of Dreamweaver web development. This book also functions as a grounding and installation reference for additional technologies like PHP, ASP, MySQL, and CSS. Inside the covers of this book, await top-notch solutions to your web development problems.
-
PHP MySQL Website Programming: Problem - Design - Solution
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Chris Lea, Mike Buzzard, Dilip Thomas, Jessey White-Cinis, Apress
PHP MySQL Website Programming: Problem - Design - Solution shows the development process for a website using a specific set of technologies: the Apache web server, the MySQL database system, and the PHP scripting language. It gives you a completely hands-on experience and guides you through the construction of a complete application-driven site from design to deployment.
-
Applied ADO.NET: Building Data-Driven Solutions
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by David Talbot, Mahesh Chand, Apress
Applied ADO.NET: Building Data-Driven Solutions provides extensive coverage of ADO.NET technology, including ADO.NET internals, namespaces, classes, and interfaces. Whereas most books cover only the SQL and OLE DB data providers, authors Mahesh Chand and David Talbot detail the SQL, OLE DB, and ODBC data providers, as well as the latest additions to ADO.NET, the Oracle, MySQL, and XML .NET data providers.
-
MySQL
Published 19 years ago includes sample chapter
by Michael Kofler, Apress
Unmistakably, the advent of Open Source technologies has made a considerable impact upon the IT sector in recent years. Perhaps the repercussions of this impact resonate no more loudly than in the database sector, where Open Source databasing products offer users a comparable alternative to the costly commercial solutions available on the market today. One such Open Source database enjoying enormous popularity is MySQL.