Yes.
It is possible, but you have to know what kind of database do you want to access, as well as the opearting system and C-compiler your are using.
Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.Microsoft Access is a database.
Not that I'm aware of. But since Filemaker is a database, you can use C++ to access the database just as you would use C++ to create SQL queries on an SQL database. Think of Filemaker as being the backend to your C++ program.
There is none. While you can access databases from C++, the two concepts are fundamentally different.
An Access database is a relational database contained in a single file that you can upload to a directory on your Web server. People typically create an Access database file using Microsoft Access or FrontPage.
An Access database is a relational database contained in a single file that you can upload to a directory on your Web server. People typically create an Access database file using Microsoft Access or FrontPage.
Have your form's input insert into a database (SQL, Oracle, etc) then access that database through Access's ODBC connection.
Depends on what kind of database you are opening. I only know of OLEDB (Access) database. Dim conn as New System.Data.OledbConnection conn.ConnectionString="C:\a.mdb" conn.Cpen() 'code goes here conn.Close() That's how you open an database.
None. Microsoft Access is a database application.
Open the database in Access 2007 and save as Access 2007 format.
Relational Database
To access the smiles database for chemical compounds, you can visit the official website of the smiles database or use a specialized chemical database platform that provides access to smiles notation for compounds.