jOOQ
ASP.NET Core
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jOOQ | ASP.NET Core | |
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93 | 1,632 | |
5,874 | 34,267 | |
0.7% | 1.5% | |
9.8 | 9.9 | |
11 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Java | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
jOOQ
- ORMs are nice but they are the wrong abstraction
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Do jOOQ DAOs support Kotlin Coroutines with R2DBC?
See: https://github.com/jOOQ/jOOQ/issues/5916
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Ask HN: What's your experience with stored procedures-heavy systems?
I've worked on a few systems that were stored procedure heavy with Microsoft SQL server, not so much because I am a .NET guy, some of these came when I was working on super-random projects for a consulting company.
My take is that it is a lot like building a system that has an API over the database except that instead of writing in API in, say, Java and exposing it through an http API with, say, JAX-RS, you are writing the API in stored procedures and accessing it through JDBC or ODBC or the native API of the database.
It seems very possible to build some thin layer that uses metadata to make an http API over stored procedures.
I'd say that systems like that can work very well.
The basic challenge is maintaining version control over your scripts, my coworkers were rubyists on my first such project and built a system inspired by migrations in Ruby on Rails where we wrote up and down migration scripts for every database change. I carried that approach to other projects where the people had less discipline to begin with. There is a little awkwardness there that the "down" script that reverts a procedure to a previous version has a cut-and-pasted copy of the old version of the stored procedure, if I had to do it over again I'd make something where each version of a stored proc is in a numbered file and the "migrations" just say "upgrade ABC proc to version 7" or maybe you could make something that looks into the VCS and finds the old version.
From what I've read, PL/SQL from Oracle looks a lot better than the Transact-SQL language in SQL server but I've never done a major project with Oracle. Most places I've worked at recently use PostgreSQL and I think this would be a viable architecture for that.
One area where it seems to be a hassle is with the "query builder" pattern, for instance where I work now we have a very complex search form with a huge number of options that builds a SQL query. I think you can do that kind of thing with what they call "Dynamic SQL", see
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/15/plpgsql-statements.html#P...
but it seems preferable to do that kind of thing with a real programming language, particularly if you have tools like
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SQL based language for the SQL impaired?
I have a bachelor's in computer science, took a databases class in college (which I did poorly in), and worked as a backend developer for two years, but I always struggled with SQL. I can do the basic SELECT * FROM table WHERE column = 1 but when the SQL statement gets long with lots of joins I couldn't understand it and relied on another programmer for help. When I need to build a website myself I end up going with MongoDB because that allows me to write code instead of writing SQL. That being said, instead of doing all the data processing stuff in the backend, I'd like to try doing as much of it as I can in the database and learn some programmimg language that is SQL-esque (for my next personal project). I know Scala and am very comfortable doing functional programming stuff like List(1,2,3).filter(_.isEven()) to get the even numbers in a list or writing List(1,2,3).reduce(_+_) to apply the addition operation on all the numbers in a list. I know the Big Data framework Apache Spark is written in and works with Scala, but I really want to learn something that works with a traditional database that runs on one centralized server and not have to worry about the distributed computing MapReduce paradigm stuff (also installing the Big Data ecosystem on my personal computer is a pain). Like I want to try building something with a traditional database like Oracle, SQL Server, etc. Something I find really helpful is having IDE code error highlighting and auto-completion and the ability to run a static analysis code quality checker tool, which I can do with Scala code, but I don't know of a way to have those things with traditional SQL Strings sent from the backend to the database. I know of things like Java's JOOQ or C#'s LINQ, but I don't want to use one of those, I want to use something in the database that is database specific and pushes as much data processing as possible into the database. I heard of languages like PL/SQL, T-SQL, and PL/pgSQL to add procedural control to SQL, making it like a real programming language. On Wikipedia I found this list of PL/SQL editors but there are so many choices and I don't know which one to pick (it has to not cost me money and I would love one that has auto-completion with error highlighting and suggestions or maybe some sort of graphical query builder tool that gives me choices of what to put to compose my statement). I saw someone on Reddit say that more recently they added the ability to add database triggers in various programming languages. I also heard mentions online of this thing called "dbt" which adds software engineering tools like version control to SQL, but I don't know if that can help me get around my difficulty with SQL or if it is something I would want to use. Any advice would be appreciated.
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Spring boot ili asp.net core?
Spring Boot, ili ako bi nesto vise lightweight u Javi Spark + jOOQ
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Is ORM still an anti-pattern?
> I've been doing ORM on Java since Hibernate was new, and it has always sucked.
Have you ever looked at something like myBatis? In particular, the XML mappers: https://mybatis.org/mybatis-3/dynamic-sql.html
Looking back, I actually quite liked it - you had conditionals and ability to build queries dynamically (including snippets, doing loops etc.), while still writing mostly SQL with a bit of XML DSL around it, which didn't suck as much as one might imagine. The only problem was that there was still writing some boilerplate, which I wasn't the biggest fan of.
Hibernate always felt like walking across a bridge that might collapse at any moment (one eager fetch away from killing the performance, or having some obscure issue related to the entity mappings), however I liked tooling that let you point towards your database and get a local set of entities mapped automatically, even though codegen also used to have some issues occasionally (e.g. date types).
That said, there's also projects like jOOQ which had a more code centric approach, although I recall it being slightly awkward to use in practice: https://www.jooq.org/ (and the autocomplete killed the performance in some IDEs because of all the possible method signatures)
More recently, when working on a Java project, I opted for JDBI3, which felt reasonably close to what you're describing, at the expense of not being able to build dynamic queries as easily, as it was with myBatis: https://jdbi.org/
That said, with the multi-line string support we have in Java now, it was rather pleasant regardless: https://blog.kronis.dev/tutorials/2-4-pidgeot-a-system-for-m...
I don't think there's a silver bullet out there, everything from lightweight ORMs, to heavy ORMs like Hibernate, or even writing pure SQL has drawbacks. You just have to make the tradeoffs that will see you being successful in your particular project.
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SQL-Parsing
Have a look at jooq - I know this has been used to rewrite SQL from one dialect to another, so it MUST be capable of collating code activity metrics. Look here. Otherwise, you might want to look into writing your own parser. ANTLR has a T-SQL dialect parser script here.
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Magnum: A new Scala 3 Database Client
Feature requests go here: https://github.com/jOOQ/jOOQ/issues/new/choose. Looking forward!
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Looking4Library: A GraphQL client that has query methods on the generated types
You may have the fortune of being familiar with the jOOQ library for Java/JVM apps, that can generate domain models based on your database schema, as well as methods on these classes to perform queries. In case you're not, here an example Postgres schema:
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Do you use DB Enum Types?
Some of our applications already use DB schema-based code generation too (e.g. jOOQ), which makes using the DB-defined enum quite easy.
ASP.NET Core
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Middleware in .NET 8
This approach to organizing middleware enhances code readability, maintainability, and reusability. By following this encapsulation pattern, you're adhering to best practices in ASP.NET Core development, ensuring your application remains well-organized and scalable.
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.NET Monthly Roundup - March 2024 - .NET 9 Preview 2, Smart Components, AI fun, and more!
🌟.NET 9 Preview 2 ➡️.NET 9 Preview 2 Discussion ➡️ASP.NET Core updates in .NET 9 Preview 2 ➡️ASP.NET Core updates in .NET 9 Preview 2 Release Notes ➡️EF Core updates in .NET 9 Preview 2 ➡️.NET Aspire preview 4 - .NET Aspire
- Chrome Feature: ZSTD Content-Encoding
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The Mechanics of Silicon Valley Pump and Dump Schemes
Even if you look at Microsoft’s by far most popular GitHub project, they’re still only half as big as SupaBase. If you believe “the SupaBase story”, SupaBase grew and became twice as large as Microsoft in 3 years. Below is their likes over time if you’re curious, together with a couple of additional “too good to be true” Silicon Valley projects.
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Bug Thread
https://github.com/dotnet/aspnetcore/issues/10117
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Evolutive and robust password hashing using PBKDF2 in .NET
To achieve these objectives, we will take inspiration from ASP.NET Core Identity's PasswordHasher class. It incorporates a concept of hash versioning, allowing only the number of iterations to be modified.
- Experimenting with .NET 8 Blazor Web App w/ the Blazor Server rendering mode enabled but I can't get any my events to fire.
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Observable or promise for http call from ASP.Net
yes I watched several courses, may be aim not getting clearly. but i worked with asp.net which uses http call and firebase cloud function also which uses socket connection, for socket connection its makes sense to use observable bcoz there streams of data we can observe once the connection establish ,but for http it need to be call every time.
- Como conseguir mi primer laburo
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Working with Excel Interop and BGWorker
As I'm not utilizing ASP.NET, despite its resource-intensive nature and occasional unpredictability, I prefer the cost-free option. I'm hesitant to invest in EPPlus or engage in trials, and moreover, I am more proficient with Interop. Given the limited volume of records in my department, there's a preference for utilizing tools covered by our existing license. This avoids the need for navigating through layers of approval within the chain of command and ensures compliance with our contractual agreements and Microsoft's patch management, ultimately aligning with a cost-saving mindset.
What are some alternatives?
Querydsl - Unified Queries for Java
Blazor.WebRTC
JDBI - The Jdbi library provides convenient, idiomatic access to relational databases in Java and other JVM technologies such as Kotlin, Clojure or Scala.
Introducing .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI) - .NET MAUI is the .NET Multi-platform App UI, a framework for building native device applications spanning mobile, tablet, and desktop.
Spring Data JPA - Simplifies the development of creating a JPA-based data access layer.
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
HikariCP - 光 HikariCP・A solid, high-performance, JDBC connection pool at last.
inertia-laravel - The Laravel adapter for Inertia.js.
Speedment - Speedment is a Stream ORM Java Toolkit and Runtime
PuppeteerSharp - Headless Chrome .NET API
sql2o - sql2o is a small library, which makes it easy to convert the result of your sql-statements into objects. No resultset hacking required. Kind of like an orm, but without the sql-generation capabilities. Supports named parameters.
CefSharp - .NET (WPF and Windows Forms) bindings for the Chromium Embedded Framework