sql.js
sqlite-utils
sql.js | sqlite-utils | |
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43 | 35 | |
12,234 | 1,510 | |
0.6% | - | |
6.5 | 8.1 | |
11 days ago | 23 days ago | |
JavaScript | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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sql.js
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Show HN: Appendable – Index JSONL data and query via CDN
Hi HN! A friend and I were inspired by projects like https://github.com/sql-js/sql.js and the idea of querying files served over CDN with HTTP range requests. We started thinking: what would a database that was specifically designed for this type of use case look like? So we started building one, and we landed on a functional prototype that we're pretty proud of!
With our prototype, Appendable, we're able to serve and query large (GB+) datasets by hosting them on a static file host like Amazon S3 or Cloudflare R2 without running a separate server and worrying about things like tail latency, replication, and connection pooling -- all that is handled for us by the file hoster.
Additionally, one tenet that we have been following is Appendable won't touch your underlying data, so your jsonl file is preserved and we point at that data instead of consuming it into an Appendable-specific file format. This keeps your data yours and makes it easy to introspect the data: just open it up with your favorite editor aka vim.
We're curious what you think, we're excited to build this out further to get the performance even better and add features like pubsub. Everything is open source at https://github.com/kevmo314/appendable.
Kevin and Matthew
- How to show CRUD projects on Github?
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I made a website where you can use SQLite in your browser
My project is powered by sql.js, I recommend checking that out if you're interested - https://github.com/sql-js/sql.js/
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How to build interactive way to learn SQL using Next.js and database?
Maybe you can try to use some SQL database compiled as Web Assembly Modules? Like this one for example: https://github.com/sql-js/sql.js
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Recommendations for data structure and storage
If you want to have persistence, then I would go with a database like Dexie, as it uses IndexedDB and has transactions. If you just want something that's in memory, you could look at Sql.js or something simple like lowdb.
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I have a large JSON object (~2GB), what's the best way to make a site that lets you search through it and display the results without crashing?
not necessarily. you can host an html/js/sqlite site on github pages for free. json -> sqlite3 js -> sql
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new release of : https://sql.js.org/
Link: https://sql.js.org
- Web-Projekt - Hilfe, weil ich nicht weiß, was ich benötige :S
- Learn Postgres at the Playground
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Show HN: CSVFiddle – Query CSV files with DuckDB in the browser
Does it work with really large files? Like, >100mb or so. I was considering making something similar but with sqlite.js [1], but the problem with it is that it loads everything in memory, so I wasn't entirely sure how it will deal with larger workloads.
[1]: https://sql.js.org/#/
sqlite-utils
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Ask HN: High quality Python scripts or small libraries to learn from
https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils
So, his code might not be a good place to find best patterns (for ex, I don't think they are fully typed), but his repos are very pragmatic, and his development process is super insightful (well documented PRs for personal repos!). Best part, he blogs about every non-trivial update, so you get all the context!
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Why you should probably be using SQLite
Sounds like your problem is with SQLAlchemy, not with SQLite.
My https://sqlite-utils.datasette.io library might be a better fit for you. It's a much thinner abstraction than SQLAlchemy.
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Welcome to Datasette Cloud
There are a few things you can do here.
SQLite is great at JSON - so I often dump JSON structures in a TEXT column and query them using https://www.sqlite.org/json1.html
I also have plugins for running jq() functions directly in SQL queries - https://datasette.io/plugins/datasette-jq and https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils-jq
I've been trying to drive the cost of turning semi-structured data into structured SQL queries down as much as possible with https://sqlite-utils.datasette.io - see this tutorial for more: https://datasette.io/tutorials/clean-data
This is also an area that I'm starting to explore with LLMs. I love the idea that you could take a bunch of messy data, tell Datasette Cloud "I want this imported into a table with this schema"... and it does that.
I have a prototype of this working now, I hope to turn it into an open source plugin (and Datasette Cloud feature) pretty soon. It's using this trick: https://til.simonwillison.net/gpt3/openai-python-functions-d...
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SQLite Functions for Working with JSON
I've baked a ton of different SQLite tricks - including things like full-text indexing support and advanced alter table methods - into my sqlite-utils CLI tool and Python library: https://sqlite-utils.datasette.io
My Datasette project provides tools for exploring, analyzing and publishing SQLite databases, plus ways to expose them via a JSON API: https://datasette.io
I've also written a ton of stuff about SQLite on my two blogs:
- https://simonwillison.net/tags/sqlite/
- https://til.simonwillison.net/sqlite
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Show HN: Trogon – An automatic TUI for command line apps
This is really fun. I have an experimental branch of my sqlite-utils CLI tool (which has dozens of sub-commands) running with this now and it really did only take 4 lines of code - I'm treating Trogon as an optional dependency because people using my package as a Python library rather than a CLI tool may not want the extra installed components:
https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils/commit/ec12b780d5dcd6...
There's an animated GIF demo of the result here: https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils/issues/545#issuecomme...
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I'm sure I'm being stupid.. Copying data from an API and making a database
My project https://datasette.io/ is ideal for this kind of thing. You can use https://sqlite-utils.datasette.io/ to load JSON data into a SQLite database, then publish it with Datasette.
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Just: A Command Runner
I've been using this for about six months now and I absolutely love it.
Make never stuck for me - I couldn't quite get it to fit inside my head.
Just has the exact set of features I want.
Here's one example of one of my Justfiles: https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils/blob/fc221f9b62ed8624... - documented here: https://sqlite-utils.datasette.io/en/stable/contributing.htm...
I also wrote about using Just with Django in this TIL: https://til.simonwillison.net/django/just-with-django
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Ask HN: What Do You Use for a Personal Database
SQLite with the open source toolchain I've been building over the past five years:
https://datasette.io as the interface for running queries against (and visualizing) my data.
https://sqlite-utils.datasette.io/ as a set of tools for creating and modifying my databases (inserting JSON or CSV data, enabling full text search text)
https://dogsheep.github.io as a suite of tools for importing my personal data - see also this talk I gave about that project: https://simonwillison.net/2020/Nov/14/personal-data-warehous...
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The Perfect Commit
Here's an example: https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils/pull/468
> After identifying about 7 commits (with pretty basic/useless messages, and no PR link!), I then had to find the corresponding PRs based on timestamps, and search the PR history for PRs merged around those timestamps.
Not sure if this would save any time, but it is possible to search PRs by commit. For example, say git blame led me to this commit: https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils/commit/129141572f249e...
I could have found PR #373 via this search: https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils/pulls?q=bb16f52681b6d...
> I thus treat PRs as ephemeral
I think I see what you're saying but as others have pointed out, sometimes you want to add screenshots etc to the context, and you can't capture this kind of info in commit messages. So then you have two choices: issues or PRs.
> Then any review comments are preferably not addressed directly in the PR
I would think that sometimes you really do want to have a back and forth conversation in the PR, rather than just a "make this change" -> "ok done" type of feedback loop.
I view the PR as an decent place for all of this because it's basically a commit of commits, capturing the related changes/conversation/context all in a single place at the point of merge.
What are some alternatives?
localForage - 💾 Offline storage, improved. Wraps IndexedDB, WebSQL, or localStorage using a simple but powerful API.
sqlmodel - SQL databases in Python, designed for simplicity, compatibility, and robustness.
LokiJS - javascript embeddable / in-memory database
sqliteviz - Instant offline SQL-powered data visualisation in your browser
PouchDB - :koala: - PouchDB is a pocket-sized database.
ImportExcel - PowerShell module to import/export Excel spreadsheets, without Excel
WatermelonDB - 🍉 Reactive & asynchronous database for powerful React and React Native apps ⚡️
octosql - OctoSQL is a query tool that allows you to join, analyse and transform data from multiple databases and file formats using SQL.
DB.js - db.js is a wrapper for IndexedDB to make it easier to work against
q - q - Run SQL directly on delimited files and multi-file sqlite databases
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
Scoop - A command-line installer for Windows.