chdb
SQLpage
chdb | SQLpage | |
---|---|---|
18 | 36 | |
1,726 | 797 | |
3.4% | - | |
9.5 | 9.8 | |
about 14 hours ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT 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.
chdb
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 06 Nov 2023
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DB Pilot: Query Postgres, files, S3 and more β all at once, from your laptop
Hey HN, creator of DB Pilot here.
I first announced DB Pilot on HN back in April: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35761979.
Since then a lot has improved: More databases are supported, most of the product can now be used for free, and most importantly:
The app now comes with an analytics workspace powered by an embedded ClickHouse instance, running locally on your machine. This allows you to query local files, files on S3, PostgreSQL, SQLite & more - and all of those at once.
Embedding ClickHouse was possible thanks to chDB (https://github.com/chdb-io/chdb). A recent discussion on HN about it: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37985005
- ChDB: Embedded OLAP SQL Engine Powered by ClickHouse
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DuckDB 0.9.0
I recommend using ClickHouse instead of DuckDB.
It has been around since 2016, and it covers and extends the feature set of DuckDB with a huge margin. Worth noting that it never has breaking changes in its table format MergeTree.
I'm tracking the progress of DuckDB and see that it is modeled after ClickHouse, but does not approach it in terms of feature completeness, stability, or performance.
The closest to DuckDB option is to use its self-contained version, clickhouse-local: https://clickhouse.com/blog/extracting-converting-querying-l... or an embedded version, chdb: https://github.com/chdb-io/chdb
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Is ClickHouse Moving Away from Open Source?
Different beasts, but if by any chance you love ClickHouse already and just want to run OLAP queries in-process, there's chdb: https://github.com/chdb-io/chdb
- ChDB: An Embedded OLAP SQL Engine Powered by ClickHouse
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PRQL, Pipelined Relational Query Language
> Can you embed it in Python as a library?
https://github.com/chdb-io/chdb
pip install chdb
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Using SQL inside Python pipelines with Duckdb, Glaredb (and others?)
New kid on the block that I prefer over DuckDB is CHDB (https://github.com/chdb-io/chdb). Embedded ClickHouse, so once you out grow your laptop you can simply move to an actual OLAP that's Open-source.
- ClickHouse-local and chdb performance issue on clickbench Q.23 Q28
SQLpage
- OAuth and OIDC Implementation in SQL
- SQLite Schema Diagram Generator
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SQLPage β Building a full web application with nothing but SQL queries [video]
Saving further clicks:
> SQLPage is a tool that allows you to build websites using nothing more than SQL queries. You write simple text files containing SQL queries, SQLPage runs them on your database, and renders the results as a website.
The 22-line "TinyTweeter" example at 28:45 [0] in the video is a good overview - perhaps better than anything currently on the homepage/docs: https://github.com/lovasoa/SQLpage/blob/main/examples/tiny_t...
Also, based on a couple of discussions [1][2] it seems like SQLPage has the potential to combine well with HTMX too. The two projects definitely share a similar philosophy.
[0] https://youtu.be/mXdgmSdaXkg?t=1721
[1] https://github.com/lovasoa/SQLpage/issues/84#issuecomment-19...
[2] https://github.com/lovasoa/SQLpage/pull/175#issuecomment-187...
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Bruno
I am currently looking for a solution to run automated tests on a sql website generator I am working on ( https://sql.ophir.dev )
I wanted to use hurl (https://hurl.dev/), but Bruno's UI seems to be useful while developing the tests... Has someone tried both ? Which is better for automated testing, including when the response type is html and not json?
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Apache Superset
Full fledged BI tools like Superset and Metabase are amazing for their intended use cases.
But they may be an overkill if your primary use case is to infrequently build semi-interactive reports for non-technical end-users and your use cases are are mostly covered by standard graphs & tables. Esp. so if you are familiar with SQL and have access to the underlying data source. Two nifty utilities I have found to be very useful for latter kind of use cases are SQLPage and Evidence.
They make it very convenient to whip out some SQL and convert that to a neat professional looking web ui that can be forwarded to an end user. In case of Evidence it is a statically generated site, and in case of SQLPage it is a web app that connects to a live database.
SQLPage: https://sql.ophir.dev/
Evidence: https://evidence.dev
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PostgREST: Providing HTML Content Using Htmx
I feel obligated to add a shameless plug here. The idea is very close to a project I presented at pgconf.eu last week: SQLPage
https://sql.ophir.dev/
SQLPage has the same goal as postgrest+htmx, but is a little bit higher level. It let's you build your application using prepackaged components you can invoke directly from SQL, without having to write any HTML, CSS, or JS.
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I think I need to go lie down
It would be great if someone could open a github issue with reproduction steps and maybe a screenshot: https://github.com/lovasoa/SQLpage/issues
The worst I'm able to get when manually disabling the cache and simulating a slow 3G connection is this: a blank page first, then text in the browser's font, then the text re-renders with the right font, then the icons load. The user should never see completely unstyled content.
The site uses "font-display: fallback" so this happens only on slow network connections. If the font loads fast enough, then the fallback never appears.
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Portugal. The Man β Official Website Is a Google Sheets Document
The official website for SQLPage (https://sql.ophir.dev/) is written in SQLPage.
The source code is here: https://github.com/lovasoa/SQLpage/tree/main/examples/offici...
The site also links to this little collaborative game written in SQLPage: https://conundrum.ophir.dev/
The github README has code snippets and associated screenshots: https://github.com/lovasoa/SQLpage#examples
There is also an official repl.it that you can fork to quickly try it online without having to download anything: https://replit.com/@pimaj62145/SQLPage
And SQLPage cloud is coming: https://sql.ophir.dev/your-first-sql-website/hosted.sql
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Ask HN: What do you like to see in tech talks?
Hey HN community!
I'll be making my first ever presentation at a large tech conference at pgconf.eu this December, where I'll be presenting the SQLPage webapp micro-framework ( https://sql.ophir.dev/ ). I'm eager to make a lasting impression and deliver a presentation that truly resonates with the audience at the conference, who probably knows more about postgres than I do.
That's where I could use your insights. What makes a good tech talk in your eyes? Do you like seeing mind-blowing demos, deep dives into code, compelling storytelling, or something else entirely ?
If you have any specific advice, tips, or ideas for structuring a tech conference presentation, I'm all ears. I want to ensure that my presentation is not just informative but also an experience to remember.
Thank you in advance for your guidance and suggestion !
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Show HN: A open-source financial accounting alternative to QuickBooks
When I see that, I always wonder whether this is part of the business plan of the people who distribute open source software for free, with a paid hosted version. There is some kind of a conflict of interest: the easier the software is to install and operate, the less attractive the hosted version.
I am working on an open-source software with a hosted version myself ( https://sql.ophir.dev ). It's a website builder, and I'm trying to make ease of deployment and operations a competitive advantage, which is marketed on the home page. But it may be idealistic to ask the same of others. My audience is mostly people who will have to operate the software themselves, whereas in most other domains, the people making the choice to use the software and the people who will then have to operate it are not the same.
What are some alternatives?
risingwave - SQL stream processing, analytics, and management. PostgreSQL simplicity, unrivaled performance, and seamless elasticity. π 10x more productive. π 10x more cost-efficient.
bigcapital - π΅ Bigcapital is financial accounting with intelligent reporting for faster decision-making, an open-source alternative to Quickbooks, Xero, etc.
openvino_notebooks - π Jupyter notebook tutorials for OpenVINOβ’
dwarf - dwarf is a typed, interpreted, language that shares syntax with Rust.
duckdb-wasm - WebAssembly version of DuckDB
duckdb-prql - PRQL as a DuckDB extension
chdb-cli - Simple CLI / REPL for chdb made in Python
budibase - Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes π
sqlite_blaster_python - A library for creating huge Sqlite indexes at breakneck speeds
pugsql - A HugSQL-inspired database library for Python
glaredb - GlareDB: An analytics DBMS for distributed data
self-hosted - Sentry, feature-complete and packaged up for low-volume deployments and proofs-of-concept