Small. Fast. Reliable.
Choose any three.
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  Reply: Pardon my question, but doesn't a maillist defeat the purpose of a wiki? The wiki avoids reinventing the wheel when another person has the same issue or question.
  
  Further reply: The mailing list is archived; those archives can be searched.  For what it's worth, what you're looking for is CAST(); see {link: http://www.sqlite.org/lang_expr.html the expressions documentation}.  On the subject of the suitability of wiki, I may be wrong, but isn't the point of wiki to collect facts?  What you've done here is ask a question, not post a fact.  Certainly a mailing list is a very good place to ask a question, as many, many people will be receiving it and will have an opportunity to answer.  Wiki pages can go unnoticed by all but the most diligent for a very long time.
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+ Reply: I've seen wiki's used for a lot of purposes. In my opinion, their shining point is to quickly create, edit, and link topics. Maillists are just a big string of unorganized text. After a while the question can perhaps be turned into an example so that it is a "fact". I searched for "covert", "compare", "to_string", "to_number", etc. in an effort to find an answer, and just plain couldn't. Now that this topic is created, ANYBODY else using those same keywords can now find the answer you gave (CAST). I would like to thank you for answering my question, but I disagree with relying on maillists for such. (Thanks for letting me state my opinion.)