Dapper.SimpleCRUD
Slick
Dapper.SimpleCRUD | Slick | |
---|---|---|
2 | 17 | |
1,125 | 2,638 | |
- | 0.0% | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
4 months ago | 11 days ago | |
C# | Scala | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Dapper.SimpleCRUD
-
100 stars in Github - Dapper Query Builder using String Interpolation
Regarding CUD (inserts/updates/deletes), I think Dommel works similarly to Dapper.FastCRUD and Dapper.SimpleCRUD, and those two look a little more mature in my opinion (not sure, but I really have the impression that Dommel is targeted at people who like this LINQ intellisense).
-
Objection to ORM Hatred
I use dapper with a plugin called dapper.simplecrud (https://github.com/ericdc1/Dapper.SimpleCRUD). This already helps to reduce the need to write simple but error-prone SQL code quite a lot. When doing SQL operations more complicated than a simple crud, I resort to raw SQL or stored procedure.
Slick
- How many people/companies are fully on Scala 3?
-
First Slick prerelease for Scala 3!
Made a PR on slick to document this https://github.com/slick/slick/pull/2760 (workaround is quite easy, you can just define def tupled = (apply _).tupled in the companion object of the case class and it will also compile for all Scala versions).
-
Sketch of a Post-ORM
The Scala ecosystem has a few ways to do composable type-safe query building, e.g. Slick[0] or more recently Quill[1]. . I believe both also have ways to do compile-time string interpolation (e.g. sql"""select * from users where id = ${user.id}""") which generate prepared statements (I know Slick does prepared statements. Quill has similar macros but I haven't looked into how safe they are to use).
[0] https://scala-slick.org/
-
Slick 3.5.0-M3 has been released
Release notes at https://github.com/slick/slick/releases/tag/v3.5.0-M3
-
Database abstraction library which allows a clean domain model
With all this in mind, I landed at the first candidate: slick from https://scala-slick.org/ that you all probably know.
-
Scala 3 migration: 7 benefits that outweigh the risks
I think Slick's current priority is also getting in Scala 3 support: https://github.com/slick/slick/issues/2177
-
Slick 3.4.x is here!
Future releases might not be announced here. To get notified, go to https://github.com/slick/slick, click the Watch dropdown button at the top, select Custom, check Releases, and click Apply.
-
Is there any good resource for learning Slick (3.x)?
https://github.com/slick/slick/pull/2097 now I use slightly lower version of slick so this might be an upgrade that resolves (I do recall using it in 21 and it was still buggy and I filed a ticket, which I cannot find at the moment), but given a complex enough query (we have one in PROD which has tons of flexibility in terms of filters that can be passed in) but it also makes for complex code.
-
Slick 3.4.0 is imminent
I started writing a reply but then I realized it would be long and depends on exactly what you mean, so maybe it's better to post the question in https://github.com/slick/slick/discussions/categories/questions?
-
Scala: A Love Story
I purchased the very entertaining book Seven Languages in Seven Weeks. Although I found Haskell fascinating and tempting, I knew it was unrealistic to introduce it in our company. Scala on the other hand looked like it could be the holy grail: All the characteristics I was looking for, no need to abandon the JVM and its cornucopia of tools and libraries, and the possibility for coexistence with Java and therefore incremental adoption. After implementing some simple programs to identify any immediate risks of committing to the language and its ecosystem, I started to introduce Scala in customer projects. Luckily, I was fortunate enough to work with open-minded, curious, and ambitious team members who were also experienced enough to appreciate the benefits of the language. We immediately applied our experience with functional programming, and embraced immutability. Libraries like Slick and Akka HTTP (we actually started out with its predecessor, Spray) made building database-backed REST services a breeze. And the resulting code was robust and highly maintainable. Scala's expressive type system and type inference made it easy to build a restrictive, consistent domain model without bloating the code. There was virtually no overhead. Any boilerplate could be easily abstracted out. In the end, the application code felt natural, concise and elegant. Programming was fun again.
What are some alternatives?
Dapper.FastCRUD - fast & light .NET ORM for strongly typed people
doobie - Functional JDBC layer for Scala.
DapperQueryBuilder - Dapper Query Builder using String Interpolation and Fluent API
Quill - Compile-time Language Integrated Queries for Scala
Dapper Extensions - Dapper Extensions is a small library that complements Dapper by adding basic CRUD operations (Get, Insert, Update, Delete) for your POCOs. For more advanced querying scenarios, Dapper Extensions provides a predicate system. The goal of this library is to keep your POCOs pure by not requiring any attributes or base class inheritance.
ScalikeJDBC - A tidy SQL-based DB access library for Scala developers. This library naturally wraps JDBC APIs and provides you easy-to-use APIs.
Norm.net - Norm.net is an innovative and high-performance Database Access for .NET Standard 2.1 and higher
Squeryl - A Scala DSL for talking with databases with minimum verbosity and maximum type safety
sql-template-tag - ES2015 tagged template string for preparing SQL statements, works with `pg`, `mysql`, and `sqlite`
Clickhouse-scala-client - Clickhouse Scala Client with Reactive Streams support
TypeORM - ORM for TypeScript and JavaScript. Supports MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Oracle, SAP Hana, WebSQL databases. Works in NodeJS, Browser, Ionic, Cordova and Electron platforms.
Sorm - A functional boilerplate-free Scala ORM