The
...>
is a line-continuation prompt from SQLite. Follow the steps below instead.
$ sqlite3 test.db
SQLite version 3.7.9 2011-11-01 00:52:41
Enter ".help" for instructions
Enter SQL statements terminated with a ";"
sqlite> create table test (n integer primary key);
sqlite> .quit
$ ls test.db
test.db
You can pipe a SQL string into SQLite, too.
$ echo "create table test_2 (n integer primary key);" | sqlite3 test.db
And you can look at the tables like this.
$ sqlite3 test.db
SQLite version 3.7.9 2011-11-01 00:52:41
Enter ".help" for instructions
Enter SQL statements terminated with a ";"
sqlite> .tables
test test_2
Or provide the SQL string as an argument to the sqlite3 executable.
$ sqlite3 test.db "create table test3 (n integer primary key);"
sqlite> create table mytable(id integer primary key, value text)
also. there is no file created in the working directory called test.db