A Friday 08 May 2009, Tim Michelsen escrigué: > > In this sense, I've always thought that a powerful database > > abstraction layer could be done around PyTables *and* a relational > > database. In such an abstraction, one could create special > > entities that are meant for performance (or to use compression or > > other PyTables strenghts), and these would be implemented with > > PyTables as backend. Also, these entities could be linked with the > > traditional relational database so as to provide a relatively > > seemless integration between both. > > > > While the above approach is definitely much less work than > > providing a full SQL interface to PyTables, to my knowledge nobody > > has stepped in yet. But it is definitely an interesting venue, > > IMO. > > I suppose that you submit this as a Google Summer of Code project for > the next year... > A good project idea...
Well, I have to recognize that I haven't thought about this. Will consider it for next year indeed. Cheers, -- Francesc Alted "One would expect people to feel threatened by the 'giant brains or machines that think'. In fact, the frightening computer becomes less frightening if it is used only to simulate a familiar noncomputer." -- Edsger W. Dykstra "On the cruelty of really teaching computer science" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanners deliver under ANY circumstances! Your production scanning environment may not be a perfect world - but thanks to Kodak, there's a perfect scanner to get the job done! With the NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanner you'll get full speed at 300 dpi even with all image processing features enabled. http://p.sf.net/sfu/kodak-com _______________________________________________ Pytables-users mailing list Pytables-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pytables-users