I was under the impression that this mailing list was restricted to members.
However:
http://sqlite.1065341.n5.nabble.com/Under-what-circumstances-can-a-table-be-
locked-when-the-database-is-first-opened-td82371.html
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.db.sqlite.general/95119
Ditto. My C# code routinely gets close to native C performance whenever I get
around to benchmarking it, which is not often these days. And I can actually
write code that runs safely on my 8 cores or on my teraflop GPU if I really
need the speed.
But as I said, I really don't think this is the
As I said, I won't fuel the fire. This is the wrong place for this kind of
debate, and you should realise that. Your post reflects immaturity and
narrow experience, but I won't be the one to broaden your outlook. Your post
contains provable errors of fact, but I won't be correcting them. The
> Mensaje original
> De: Scott Hess
> Para: General Discussion of SQLite Database mailinglists.sqlite.org>
> Fecha: Sun, 14 Jun 2015 10:10:24 -0700
> Asunto: Re: [sqlite] Mozilla wiki 'avoid SQLite'
>
While certainly, the thread has derived from the concept of the OP, and even
some
Actually, SQL does a mixture of both relational calculus and relational
algebra,
but not necessarily all of either.
Seeing the algebra is fairly straightforward, eg the UNION or WHERE etc.
An example of the calculus is seen in SELECT...FROM... involving a JOIN, for
example:
SELECT
What I'm thinking now is to what extent the developer who put up the Mozilla
wiki page was entitled to put up opinions and statements either expressed or
implied about a third-party product on behalf of the Mozilla Foundation (though
is that the same Foundation that pays the Consortium member
I won't abuse the patience of our hosts by prolonging this debate, but I
disagree strongly with this theme.
I have almost certainly written more C/C++ code than you or most of the
people on this list, and I never choose it first. I am personally at least 3
times as productive in C# as I am in C
> On 15 Jun 2015, at 15:44, Scott Robison wrote:
>
> Too many of these technology based discussions (whether languages or
> operating systems or text editors or database engines or whatever) break
> down into almost a religious fervor of "this is the one true
You mean like your comment from
The MyJSQLView project is pleased to release v7.03 to the public. The
release is to fix the plugin management tool proxy setting property.
Remote HTTP repositories can not be created or loaded. The release
also is for archiving purposes to finalize the last release before
the move of the code
I thought it had always been open - you just need to subscribe to be
able to post.
Paul
www.sandersonforensics.com
skype: r3scue193
twitter: @sandersonforens
Tel +44 (0)1326 572786
http://sandersonforensics.com/forum/content.php?195-SQLite-Forensic-Toolkit
-Forensic Toolkit for SQLite
email from a
Like most mailing lists about open source software, list archives are visible
to
the general public, which is what I think should be the norm. Generally
restrictions to members just concern posting, its a simple way to keep spam
out,
one has to confirm an email address to post. -- Darren
>>>There are queries that cannot be formulated in first order predicate
logic, and recursion is the single capability of SQL that exceeds FOPL
power.
True, wrt SQLite and its dialect, for which RCTE provides Turing
Completeness. Untrue for dialects of SQL that include PSM.
>>>Unless the
>>>The task is to write some SQL code, including as many
INSERT/UPDATE/DELETEs as you want to make other tables with information
about the program, with a final SELECT which returns TRUE if and only if the
program will halt.
SQL with Recursive CTE is Turing Complete. The above is provably
On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 9:08 AM, Marc L. Allen
wrote:
> Perhaps you might want to consider an apology and check your headers next
> time.
>
> I'm pretty sure the comment you quoted from this morning was written by
> Scott Doctor, not Scott Robinson.
>
Thanks for the reply to the list. I'd
If you have some test data I'll happily do that one. Meanwhile here is
something similar, using the test data from the SQLite CTE page.
orgchart
name | boss
-
Alice |
Bob | Alice
Cindy | Alice
Dave | Bob
Emma | Bob
Fred | Cindy
Gail | Cindy
ua := {{ name:= 'Alice', level := 0
Oh dear. So you think that a high level language is one that does things by
calling a lower level language? Stop embarrassing yourself.
A high level language is one where the language designers are free to use
whatever structural concepts best fit the problems that the language is
designed
Perhaps you might want to consider an apology and check your headers next time.
I'm pretty sure the comment you quoted from this morning was written by Scott
Doctor, not Scott Robinson.
-Original Message-
From: sqlite-users-bounces at mailinglists.sqlite.org
This is not an answer to just the latest post, it is directed at multiple
posts.
1. C# is typically compiled to Common Intermediate Language which very much
is a form of "byte code" in that it is not directly executed by the
processor. The .net environment will just in time compile that into a
On Jun 15, 2015, at 6:42 AM, wrote:
> I was under the impression that this mailing list was restricted to members.
> However:
>
> http://sqlite.1065341.n5.nabble.com/Under-what-circumstances-can-a-table-be-
> locked-when-the-database-is-first-opened-td82371.html
>
On 15/06/15 01:00, Simon Slavin wrote:
Simon,
> Perhaps the next generation of computer languages will be designed by
> computer, to let us speak to them in an efficient manner.
>
I'm sure computer would insist on C, if not, then it's apparently a
software bug.
On a serious note, i think
On 6/14/2015 11:28 PM, david at andl.org wrote:
> I won't abuse the patience of our hosts by prolonging this debate, but I
> disagree strongly with this theme.
So you disagree with a disagreement?
> I have almost certainly written more C/C++ code than you or most of the
> people on this list,
Just a quick progress report, in case anyone is interested.
First, I added a RECURSE() function to Andl, similar to the CTE in SQLite.
The Mandelbrot algorithm looks like this.
xaxis := {{ x:=-2.0 }} recurse( {{ x:=x+0.05 }} [?(x<1.2)])
yaxis := {{ y:=-1.0 }} recurse( {{ y:=y+0.1 }} [?(y<1.1)])
On 14 Jun 2015, at 9:19pm, Richard Hipp wrote:
> There was a huge debate in
> the software industry in the 1980s about whether applications should
> be coded in assembly or C. Hand-coded assembly is theoretically
> faster than machine-code generated by a C compiler (or at least it was
> in the
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