lambdo
differential-datalog
lambdo | differential-datalog | |
---|---|---|
3 | 22 | |
22 | 1,338 | |
- | 0.4% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 3 years ago | 10 months ago | |
Python | Java | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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lambdo
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Why isn't differential dataflow more popular?
It will return the sum of all values in column A. For large tables it will take some time to compute the result. Now assume we append a new record and want to get the new result. The traditional approach is execute this query again. A better approach is to process this new record only by adding its value in A to the result of the previous query. It is important in (stateful) stream processing.
Something similar is implemented in these libraries which however rely on a different data processing conception (alternative to map-reduce):
https://github.com/asavinov/prosto - Functions matter! No join-groupby, No map-reduce.
https://github.com/asavinov/lambdo - Feature engineering and machine learning: together at last!
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Feature Processing in Go
I find this project quite interesting because sklearn has a good general design including data transformations and it does make sense to provide compatible functionality for Go.
Feature engineering in general is a hot topic and especially if features are not simple hard-coded transformations but rather can be learned from data. For example, I developed a toolkit intended for combining feature engineering and ML:
https://github.com/asavinov/lambdo - Feature engineering and machine learning: together at last!
differential-datalog
- DDlog: A programming language for incremental computation
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Feldera – a more performant streaming database based on Z-sets
Hi,
> I wonder if it lives up to the hype.
We do think so! (disclaimer: I'm a co-founder at Feldera)
To give some more background: We are co-designing/trialing feldera with several industry/enterprise partners from different domains. Our core team also built differential datalog (https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog) in the past. And while ddlog is used quite successfully in products today, we believe the many lessons we learned with ddlog will help us to build an even better continuous analytics platform. FYI our code is open-source at https://github.com/feldera/feldera if you'd like to try it out.
Also feel free to join our community slack channel (https://www.feldera.com/slack/) if you have more questions.
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Why Are There No Relational DBMSs? [pdf]
The relational model (and generally working at the level of sets/collections, instead of the level of individual values/objects) actually makes it easier to have this kind of incremental computation in a consistent way, I think.
There's a bunch of work being done on making relational systems work this way. Some interesting reading:
- https://www.scattered-thoughts.net/writing/an-opinionated-ma...
- https://materialize.com/ which is built on https://timelydataflow.github.io/differential-dataflow/, which has a lot of research behind it
- Which also can be a compilation target for Datalog: https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog
- Some prototype work on building UI systems in exactly the way you describe using a relational approach: https://riffle.systems/essays/prelude/ (and HN discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30530120)
(There's a lot more too -- I have a hobby interest in this space, so I have a small collection of links)
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Differential Datalog: a programming language for incremental computation
Tutorial which I didn’t see linked in the README: https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog/blob/master/d...
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Show HN: Cozo – new Graph DB with Datalog, embedded like SQLite, written in Rust
This is amazing!
Have you looked at differential-datalog? It's rust-based, maintained by VMWare, and has a very rich, well-typed Datalog language. differential-datalog is in-memory only right now, but could be ideal to integrate your graph as a datastore or disk spill cache.
https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog
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Help wanted!
Sort of related, in my mind at least, is differential dataflow, e.g. https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog
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Datalog in JavaScript
It’s fascinating to see so many different parties converging on Datalog for reactive apps & UI.
- There are several such talks at https://www.hytradboi.com/ (happening this Friday)
- Roam Research and its clones Athens, Logseq, use Datascript / ClojureScript https://github.com/tonsky/datascript
- differential-datalog isn’t an end-to-end system, but is highly optimized for quick reactivity https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog
- Datalog UI is a Typescript port of some of differential-datalog’s ideas https://datalogui.dev/
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Call for Help - Open Source Datom/EAV/Fact database in Rust.
Rust related https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog
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Anything like Svelte/Jetpack Compose for Haskell?
Actually, that makes me wonder whether or not differential datalog falls under that umbrella, and if it could be applied in the same way Compose is.
What are some alternatives?
differential-dataflow - An implementation of differential dataflow using timely dataflow on Rust.
scryer-prolog - A modern Prolog implementation written mostly in Rust.
ballista - Distributed compute platform implemented in Rust, and powered by Apache Arrow.
timely-dataflow - A modular implementation of timely dataflow in Rust
rslint - A (WIP) Extremely fast JavaScript and TypeScript linter and Rust crate
materialize - The data warehouse for operational workloads.
tablespoon - 🥄✨Time-series Benchmark methods that are Simple and Probabilistic
openHistorian - The Open Source Time-Series Data Historian
datalevin - A simple, fast and versatile Datalog database
sliding-window-aggregators - Reference implementations of sliding window aggregation algorithms
logica - Logica is a logic programming language that compiles to SQL. It runs on Google BigQuery, PostgreSQL and SQLite.