Comment by curiousmindz
5 years ago
If you use certain new features of SQLite, the database file gets "upgraded". At that time, you must use a version of SQLite that understands these new features.
So, the other computer you used was probably running an older version of SQLite. Just update it to make it work.
I think the computer it worked on was one with an older version of SQLite rather than a newer one, but I’m not certain. It was a while ago. I thought I’d checked for the upgrade issue, but my memory is shit.
That’s a good catch. I’d there any way to tell which version of SQLite created the file? Aside from trial and error, I mean?
The version is stored in byte 96 of the header of the sqlite file[1].
I haven't looked but there will be some sqlite command to query it and I'm sure some viewer tools will display it as well.
[1] https://www.sqlite.org/fileformat.html
You can print the version with this magical incantation:
Recentish versions of file can show you the version: