- #Crystal report 10 compatibility with 11 install#
- #Crystal report 10 compatibility with 11 professional#
There is nothing special you need to know or any special tricks when reporting against views. Reporting against views is the way most reports against Crystal will be done. You can add multiple tables and link them in Crystal as with any other database. If you must report against a table in a schema other than the public schema create a view against the table and report off of that view. If the table(s) are not a member of the public schema and you try to add them to your report Crystal will give you an error message(Not supported). Tables can be added to Crystal Reports using the database expert like any other database BUT must be a member of the public schema. Reporting against tables can be done with cavets.
If you cannot connect to the database please contact your admin or read the PostgreSQL documentation to check your database settings. Access to a PostgreSQL database is of course required.
#Crystal report 10 compatibility with 11 install#
I recommend that you install Service Pack 1 and/or search for a hot fix from Crystal.Your version of Crystal must support editing of the SQL statements generated by Crystal to report against a stored procedure. Prior versions of Crystal should support reporting against a PostgreSQL datasource with the exception of stored procedures.
#Crystal report 10 compatibility with 11 professional#
This document was written using Crystal Reports 9.0 Professional as the development tool. I hope this document will help others who must use a Crystal Reports and PostgreSQL combination. When I began reporting against a PostgreSQL database I ran into some quirks that were difficult to find solutions for. Until recently I had used it to report against Microsoft Access, Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft SQL Server, and Sybase databases. I started using Crystal Reports around release 7.