SqlKata Query Builder
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SqlKata Query Builder | Apache Ignite | |
---|---|---|
5 | 3 | |
2,992 | 4,675 | |
1.3% | 0.7% | |
3.0 | 9.6 | |
27 days ago | 7 days ago | |
C# | Java | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
SqlKata Query Builder
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EF Core or Dapper
SqlKata is your friend.
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ASP.Net Core database modelling without using existing ORMs?
Don't know if can be a good pick for the no-ORM requirement but I would take a look at SqlKata which is a nice query builder + execution engine, built on top of Dapper
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Which ORM to study ?
Not really an ORM. But I have been enjoying SqlKata recently. Works with Dapper but helps reduce SQL strings and makes things like pagination really easy. Also nice for dynamic filters.
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Windyquery: A non-blocking Python PostgreSQL query builder
That is basically the description of an object mapper, with all the guarantees of an object mapper :). It seems if you actually use the query builder as such, no guarantees exist.
I'm pretty picky regarding query builders and ORM's, to the extent of having written several of them over the years, in different languages (both dynamic and strong typed, unfortunately closed-source). I'm a strong advocate of schema-first design, and usually a query builder will allow you to design your queries explicitly, but having some internal behaviors (such as string concatenation, identifier quoting and automatic in-order separation of parameters and values to be bound) taken care of. As good examples of this, I'd mention golang's goqu (https://github.com/doug-martin/goqu) and - to some extent - C# SqlKata (https://sqlkata.com/). Following my frustrations with Python ORMs, I built my own toy project, sort-of-in-beta, called rickdb (https://github.com/oddbit-project/rick_db).
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I don't want to learn your garbage query language
Less about the exact syntax and more about the tool, for example: https://github.com/sqlkata/querybuilder. I just chose that since it was on top of a search but the idea is the same. Your code generates raw SQL, so it's 100% interchangeable with writing SQL yourself however the builder library deals with the syntax, proper ordering, quoting, full attribute names, etc. Some such libraries even let you define your schema in code to make your SQL generation type safe.
Apache Ignite
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Ask HN: P2P Databases?
Ignite works as you describe:
I wouldn't really recommend this approach, I would think more in terms of subscriptions and topics and less of a 'database'.
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Which library/project do you wish was ported to golang?
Apache Ignite https://ignite.apache.org/
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.NET and Apache Ignite: Testing Cache and SQL API features — Part I
Last days, I started using Apache Ignite as a cache strategy for some applications. Apache Ignite is an open-source In-Memory Data Grid, distributed database, caching, and high-performance computing platform.
What are some alternatives?
Yessql - A .NET document database working on any RDBMS
LiteDB - LiteDB - A .NET NoSQL Document Store in a single data file
NReco LambdaParser - Runtime parser for string expressions (formulas, method calls). Builds dynamic LINQ expression tree and compiles it to lambda delegate.
MongoDB - The MongoDB Database
Alluxio (formerly Tachyon) - Alluxio, data orchestration for analytics and machine learning in the cloud
Event Store - EventStoreDB, the event-native database. Designed for Event Sourcing, Event-Driven, and Microservices architectures
Insight.Database - Fast, lightweight .NET micro-ORM
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql
Realm Xamarin - Realm is a mobile database: a replacement for SQLite & ORMs