SQLite is a small, easy-to-use, open-source SQL database engine. This project, SQLite for Excel, is a lightweight wrapper to give access to the SQLite3 library from VBA. It provides a high-performance path to the SQLite3 API functions, preserving the semantics of the SQLite3 library calls and allowing access to the distributed SQLite3.dll without recompilation.
The current release has the following parts:
- ChangeLog.txt contains details of the changes in every version.
- SQLite3_StdCall.dll is a small and very simple C .dll that makes it possible to use the standard SQLite3 .dll from VBA. It just passes calls from VBA on to SQLite without any change in the parameters, but this allows the StdCall calling convention that VB6 and VBA is limited to.
- SQLiteForExcel.xls contains the two VBA modules:
- SQLite3.bas VBA module has all the VBA Declares, and does the parameter and string conversions. It exposes a number of SQLite3xxxx functions. These map as directly as possible to the SQLite C API, with no change in the semantics. Although I have not exposed the whole API, most of the core interface is included, in particular the prepared statement, binding, retrieval and backup functions. Date values are stored as Julian day real numbers in the database.
- SQLite3Demo.bas VBA module has tests that serve as nice examples of how to use the SQLite3xxxx functions.
- SQLiteForExcel_64.xlsm contains 64-bit versions of the two VBA modules in a version that supports both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Excel.The corresponding {"Sqlite3Demo_64.bas"} module shows how to target both 32-bit and 64-bit Excel with the same VBA code (some #Ifs are required). (Note that the default install of Office is always the 32-bit version, even on a 64-bit version of Windows. Only if the 64-bit version of Office has been specifically selected will the 64-bit modules be required.)
- sqlite3.dll is a copy of SQLite version 3.11.1, as downloaded from the SQLite website.
- x64\SQLite3.dll is a 64-bit build of SQLite 3.11.1.
- SQLite3VBAModules contains the four VBA modules described about (32-bit and 64-bit).
- SQLite3_StdCall contains the C language source code for the library described above.
- Download the release archive .zip file from https://github.com/govert/SQLiteForExcel/releases.
- Unzip the download to a convenient location.
- Open the Distribution\SQLiteForExcel.xls file.
- Open the VBA Editor (Alt F11).
- Note the SQLite3 module which contains the declarations and helper functions to access SQLite.
- Examine and run the example test code in the SQLite3Demo module.
- Find the documentation for the SQLite functions here: http://sqlite.org/cintro.html. The complete query language for SQLite is documented here: http://sqlite.org/lang.html.
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Brian Gonzalez has made a refactored version of the project with a class / interface style. Have a look at his fork here: https://github.com/b-gonzalez/SQLiteForExcel
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SQLite for Access - Thomas Gewinnus has ported the SQLite-Interface to Access-VBA and added a small DAO-like-Layer (class SQLiteDatabase). See Module Test__SQLiteDatabase for samples. Download the .accdb file from https://s3.amazonaws.com/share.excel-dna.net/Beispiel.zip.
- The SQLite home is at http://www.sqlite.org and the most recent version of the SQLite3.dll library can be found here http://www.sqlite.org/download.html.
- To create User-Defined Functions (UDFs) for Excel using C#, VB.NET or F#, have a look at my Excel-DNA project. It provides free and easy integration of .NET with Excel.
- For access to SQLite from .NET I recommend:
- the official System.Data.SQLite is a full-featured ADO.NET driver with full Linq and Entity Framework support, or
- the sweet-looking sqlite-net, a light-weight wrapper with attribute-based object-to-database mapping and some Linq support.
Create a new GitHub Issue. You are also welcome to contact me directly at mailto:[email protected] with questions, comments or suggestions.