diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/manual.xhtml | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.xhtml b/doc/manual.xhtml index 518cf79..0b6155c 100644 --- a/doc/manual.xhtml +++ b/doc/manual.xhtml @@ -12882,13 +12882,13 @@ class object mapping between two database types. For each database system ODB provides built-in support for a core set of database types, such as integers, strings, binary, etc. However, many database - systems provide additional types such as extensions (geospatial, - key-value stores, etc.), user-defined types, and collections (arrays, - table types, etc). In order to support such additional types, ODB - allows us to map them to one of the built-in types, normally + systems provide extended types such as geospatial types, + user-defined types, and collections (arrays, table types, + key-value stores, etc). In order to support such extended types, + ODB allows us to map them to one of the built-in types, normally a string or a binary. Given the text or binary representation of the data we can then extract it into our chosen C++ data type - and thus establish a mapping between an additional database type and + and thus establish a mapping between an extended database type and its C++ equivalent.</p> <p>The <code>map</code> pragma has the following format:</p> @@ -13075,7 +13075,7 @@ class object in a similar way. The <code>odb-tests</code> package contains a set of tests in the <code><database>/custom</code> directories that, for each database, shows how to provide custom mapping for some of - the additional types.</p> + the extended types.</p> <h2><a name="12.8">12.8 C++ Compiler Warnings</a></h2> |