In the article that we present below we are going to address the topic of DBEdit in an exhaustive and detailed way. DBEdit is a topic of great relevance today, which arouses great interest and debate in various areas. Throughout the article we will analyze the different perspectives and approaches that exist regarding DBEdit, as well as its historical relevance and its impact on current society. We will also examine the future implications of DBEdit and possible solutions or measures that could be taken regarding it. With this article, we aim to provide a global and complete vision of DBEdit, with the aim of contributing to the debate and knowledge on this topic.
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| DBEdit 2 | |
|---|---|
| Original author | Jef Van Den Ouweland |
| Developer | Jef Van Den Ouweland |
| Initial release | January 13, 2006 |
| Stable release | 2.4.6
/ May 10, 2012 |
| Repository | |
| Written in | Java |
| Operating system | Windows, Linux, Solaris |
| Platform | Java |
| Type | Relational database administration |
| License | GNU General Public License |
| Website | dbedit2 |
DBEdit 2 is a database editor, which can connect to an Oracle, IBM Db2, MySQL and any database that provides a JDBC driver. It runs on Windows, Linux and Solaris.
DBEdit is free and open source software and distributed under the GNU General Public License. The source code is hosted on SourceForge.
DBEdit is developed by Jef Van Den Ouweland. The first Windows and was used to edit an Oracle or IBM Db2 database. It is written in Java. Later on, generic JDBC support was added so that the application could connect to basically any type of database that provides a JDBC driver. One year after the first release, support for other operating systems, such as Linux and Solaris, was added. The last version of DBEdit was released in May 2012[1]