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1:55 PM
@DRich hi!
 
2:06 PM
Hi
 
2:24 PM
@Pranav hi!
 
 
2 hours later…
4:19 PM
hey, anyone around?
 
 
3 hours later…
7:08 PM
@DRich like the topic says, Ask your question, and then hang around a while to see if an expert looks back at their screen and answers it!
 
@TehShrike It does say that, doesn't it...
I was just wondering if people hung out and chatted at all here
 
heehee, yup :-)
 
I'm in a Java chat where there's a fair amount of that
 
I've been idling in this room for years. Lots of people wander through. A few familiar faces stop by every so often.
 
That's cool
I might start hanging out in here
 
7:10 PM
Cool! :-)
 
I'm working on a project, and it seems the SQL element might really start to need some attention
I figure it'll be beneficial to see what people ask
 
it usually does. SQL generally seems to be learned by people after they implement it somewhere
 
and what the answers are, you know?
@TehShrike hahaha, yuuuup
 
Indeed. I hung out in #mysql on freenode for a long time
 
MySQL- that brings up a question
how different are the different "SQL"s (is that what you call them? SQLs?)? As in, how different is T-SQL from MySql from SqlLite, etc... ?
 
7:13 PM
For the major RDBMSs, indexing everything properly and following some general good practices will get you good performance on all of them.
Most people trying to do microoptimizations have a poor schema or lack of indexes that makes their attempts at optimizing almost completely irrelevant
SQLite is different, it's based on a flat file, so it won't scale like the major storage engines
 
Ah, okay
 
but after you realize what sqlite is, it's increeeeeedibly impressive how performant it is
 
but I can't take T-SQL code and drop it into a MySQL environment, right?
I mean
maybe I can in some basic contexts- "Select ... from ... where" probably won't change a whole lot
 
@DRich yeah, that's the best way to think about it
in theory it is possible to write SQL that will work in multiple engines
 
"In theory" =]
 
7:16 PM
but unless you're testing every query against both those implementations, it's extremely unlikely that your app would run if you pointed it at another RDBMS
all implementations are different in lots of tiny special ways
sometimes they're different in large special ways
 
hahaha
"You see, when a database and a script love each other very much, they do some special things. But if that script tries to go do that special thing with another database, well the database tends to get upset"
Seriously though, I appreciate the insight
 
 
4 hours later…
10:53 PM
@DRich no problem, drop by whenever and ask questions to provoke more rambling thoughts!
 

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