On 21 Dec 2014, at 10:01pm, jonathon wrote:
> On 21/12/14 09:47, big stone wrote:
>
>> that I hope may help end-user/students popularity [2]
>> [2] http://db-engines.com/en/ranking_trend
>
> The methodology used by that site is tilted in favour of big data, and
> complex databases. Consequentl
On 21/12/14 09:47, big stone wrote:
that I hope may help end-user/students popularity [2]
[2] http://db-engines.com/en/ranking_trend
The methodology used by that site is tilted in favour of big data, and
complex databases. Consequently, even if there are ten million SQLite
databases for ever
On Sun, Dec 21, 2014 at 11:28 PM, Simon Slavin wrote:
> When you're wishing for the future, however, it's best to wish big, not
> for a tiny step-wise improvement. Don't wish for a system with a better
> journalling mode, wish for a system without 17 journalling different
> modes. Don't wish fo
On 21 Dec 2014, at 2:39pm, Stephen Chrzanowski wrote:
> SQLite4 "may" never be released, or if it is going
> to be, not for a few years yet.
SQLite 4 can be whatever gets released next. It may be nothing like SQLite4 is
now. Next month one of the developer team may have some terrific idea
> On Dec 21, 2014, at 10:47 AM, big stone wrote:
>
> - a minimal subset of analytic functions
+ MERGE! Yeah!
Happy Holidays!
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For your second point, SQLite4 "may" never be released, or if it is going
to be, not for a few years yet. 4 is a toy for the devs to try things out
without borking things up in 3. 3 is being used by millions (or is it
billions?) of devices and applications that the dev team is (very right) in
not
Hi all,
To prepare for end of 2014 greetings moment, here is my whish list for
2015:
- a minimal subset of analytic functions [1], that I hope may help
end-user/students popularity [2]
- better information on what is coming ahead, for example:
. I see the 'sessions' tree moving along main tree
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