> Thanks, everybody, for helping to make SQLite the most widely deployed
> SQL database engine in the world. And Happy 10th Birthday to SQLite!
>
> D. Richard Hipp
> d...@sqlite.org
That SQLite made it ten years is testament to its focused initial design
objectives, and unwavering adherence
Happy birthday and thanks for the memories.
This has been a damn nice project.
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 6:57 AM, D. Richard Hipp wrote:
> The first code check-in for SQLite occurred on 2000-05-29 14:26 UTC -
> ten years ago today.
>
>
> Thanks, everybody, for helping to make SQLite the most widely deployed
> SQL database engine in the world. And Happy 10th Birthday to SQLite!
No, *WE* have to thank *YOU* for this great piece of work, that you give to use
for free! Amazing!
Thank you!
bye,
Michael
Congratulations on this milestone.
I also just realized now that you're adding WAL to SQLite; I have more to say
on
this, but that will be in a new thread.
-- Darren Duncan
D. Richard Hipp wrote:
> The first code check-in for SQLite occurred on 2000-05-29 14:26 UTC -
> ten years ago today.
Mr. D. Richard Hipp,
10-year anniversary a great news and real pleasure to see how your and
supporters' skills turn this library into such big power. Sometimes it makes
me sad I can't explain to a non-developer what is so great about sqlite,
what makes it appearing in so many software packages.
The first code check-in for SQLite occurred on 2000-05-29 14:26 UTC -
ten years ago today.
http://www.sqlite.org/src/timeline?c=2000-05-29+14:26
Some of the code in SQLite (such as the Lemon parser generator and the
printf implementation) dates back to the late 1980s. But the core of
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