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EAN-130802068101015   EAN-13 barcode 0802068101015
UPC-A802068101015   UPC-A barcode 802068101015
Product NameBattleship/Connect 4/Sorry/Trouble
CategoryElectronics / Photography: Computer/Console Game
Short DescriptionHeight:0.5 inches / Length:4.75 inches / Weight:0.2 pounds / Width:5.25 inches
Amazon.comA Buy on Amazon ~ B000HKKQ3Y
SKU802068101015
Price New11.15 US Dollars    (curriencies)
Price Used6.00 US Dollars    (curriencies)
Long DescriptionBATTLESHIP: Using your skill and logic, can you be the first to sink all 5 of your opponent's ships before they can sink yours! CONNECT FOUR: Horizontal, Vertical, Diagonal. All you have to get is four in a row...Take turns dropping checkers into place, and try to get four in a row in any direction-while preventing your opponent from doing it first! SORRY! the classic game of slide and pursuit, has been supercharged for your Nintendo DS™ system! Be the first player to move all four of your pawns around the game board from Start to Home. TROUBLE: Hop you pegs around the track. Land on an opponent's peg and bump it back home. Keep poppin' and hoppin' to get all pegs to the finish line first.
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0014633153262: Theme Park
Created05-22-2010
Modified04-30-2020 6:18:26am
MD537c7b74aa3d9665564c32c24be8340d8
SHA2568ece7221076f967a0e33cf36046efa4beb4cf8350c7932bd691bfb35029e5da6
Search Googleby EAN or by Title
Query Time0.0112269

Article of interest

Here we will demonstrate the most basic example of importing the CSV data files that we produce on this site into your MySQL database.

For information about various databases you can use and how to import CSV files into them, please view the overview article "Importing CSV data into your database".

For this example, we are going to import the product data CSV file out of the sample_ean_data.zip but this same process will work on the full data download file. We will also be executing the commands in the MySQL Workbench but you can also use the command line tool with the same commands if you like.

First, start by creating a blank table. Use the table layout described in the read_me file for the most up-to-date table layout. It is suggested that you not use any indexing at this point. You can add indexes later. It is most likely that you will have your own tables where you want to store your data so importing the CSV files can be done into temporary tables and then later copied over to your tables. Leaving off the indexes and constraints on these import tables reduces the risk of import errors. Here is an example:

create table ean_product
(
    EAN13             varchar(13),
    UPCA              varchar(12),
    UPCE              varchar(8),
    SKU               varchar(200),
    PriceNew          numeric(15,2),
    PriceUsed         numeric(15,2),
    PriceDate         date,
    company           varchar(13),
    product           varchar(100),
    description       varchar(100),
    category          int,
    url               varchar(500),
    created           datetime,
    modified          datetime
);

Next we perform the import using the LOAD DATA INFILE command. The path to the file depends on where you saved the data and which operating system you are on. For Windows users you might find your file on the C: drive and Linux users may find your date in your home (~) folder. This example shows a Linux import. Only the path would be different between the operating systems.

LOAD DATA LOCAL
    INFILE '~/sample_ean_data/sample_ean_product.csv' 
    INTO TABLE ean_product
    FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' ENCLOSED BY '"' ESCAPED BY '\\'
    LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n'
    IGNORE 1 LINES;

Finally, lets look at the data that we just imported.

SELECT * FROM EAN_PRODUCT;

You may have seen some warnings after the import command. If you are concerned about these warnings, examine the data. It could be that some data has grown beyond the size specified in the read_me file. If you are worried, make the fields larger and try the process again after deleting all of the data out of the table.

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