dbForge Studio With Better Search
Written by Kay Ewbank   
Tuesday, 25 October 2016

There's a new version of  dbForge Studio for Oracle with redesigned object editors and database search.  

The visual object editor and database search in dbForge Studio for Oracle v3.9 have been completely redesigned, and the Data Viewer and Editor window have been improved.

dbForge Studio for Oracle is an integrated development environment  for Oracle that aims to give developers a faster way to code PL/SQL, along with data editing tools for managing data. The tool can be used to synchronize data between different Oracle servers and automate schema change management. 
 

The new version has redesigned object editors that you can use to edit a range of object types, including tables, views, packages, procedures, functions, triggers, user types (array types, object types, table types), sequences, materialized views, materialized view logs, synonyms, clusters, database links, and XML schemas. One improvement is support for virtual columns, and these are also supported in the schema compare tool.

 

dbforgeobjed

 

The redesigned database search tool can be used to search both objects and data, and has also been redesigned. The developers say that the suggestion performance has also been improved.

Other improvements include the ability to select multiple objects when using the 'Generate Script As' option, and a new icon design. The data editor and viewer window has an improved XML view and a new JSON view. 

dbForge Studio for Oracle v3.9 can be used for free for a 30-day evaluation period, after which product license prices start from $149.45.

 dbforgeiconoct

More Information

 dbForge Page

Related Articles

dbForge Studio For SQL Server Adds Documenter

dbForge SQL Complete 5.0  

Oracle Introduces Low-Code Cloud Dev Platform

 

To be informed about new articles on I Programmer, sign up for our weekly newsletter,subscribe to the RSS feed and follow us on, Twitter, FacebookGoogle+ or Linkedin

 

Banner


Z3 Completed This Day In 1941
12/05/2025

On May 12, 1941 Konrad Zuse completed his Z3 computer, the first program-controlled electromechanical digital computer. It followed in the footsteps of the Z1 - the world’s first binary digital [ ... ]



GCC 15.1 Released With Support For COBOL
05/05/2025

This major release of the GNU Compiler Collection is the first to include a COBOL front end. It also features improved support for Rust. Developers are also concerned about breaking changes.


More News

 

espbook

 

Comments




or email your comment to: comments@i-programmer.info

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 25 October 2016 )