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Postgres is great, but it misses many quality of life features. For example, you can't perform an UPSERT without explicitly stating all of your columns. You can code some dynamic SQL to solve this, but wouldn't it be better to install someone else's code?
In almost all programming languages we have repositories of useful, community driven packages. Think pypi + pip in Python or npm in JS. Is there something similar for PostgreSQL, or at least some place to search for snippets?
I've tried to search on Google, but it is really hard to find anything, as most searches give you tutorials or documentation pages.
there are , you can add custom feature using extension in postgresql
and there are tens of open source extensions on github apart from official extensions available for postgresql
get more information here
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I am fairly new to golang, and trying to identify the best tools for the job. Currently I am evaluating the following packages:
https://github.com/mattes/migrate
https://github.com/DavidHuie/gomigrate
https://bitbucket.org/liamstask/goose/
I was wondering if anyone had any experience with these (or other packages) and could provide some comments.
We use mattes/migrate at work and are very happy with it. It works with plain SQL files, handles file naming by itself and can easily be automated via CLI. It doesn't do anything Go specific.
With gomigrate you need to create the files yourself and write code for executing the migrations.
Take a look at https://github.com/pressly/goose, a maintained fork of https://bitbucket.org/liamstask/goose/.
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I've looked around but couldn't find a single tutorial on getting started with Phantom. Although it is being actively developed by dedicated folks, I find it very surprising that there are no quickstart tutorials around. Please share links to any tutorials if one has come across
You can checkout the phantom-dsl examples in the source folder, but if not, I've uploaded an example to my github showing how to modeling cassandra tables in scala using phantom-dsl according to the documentation.
https://github.com/iamthiago/cassandra-phantom
Docs location is confusing. They are in the .md files listed at the top of this website
https://github.com/outworkers/phantom/tree/develop/docs
Also have a look in 'basics', 'commercial' and 'querying' directories.
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As titled, I'm finding for a software can be installed on my own server, to replace for google apps.
I'm open to commercial solution, the point is I want to keep the data on my own server.
Any advice is appreciated
Okie doke. This is actually pretty challenging -- you're asking for online editing, which is very cloud-oriented, but using a private server. If all you wanted was file services, then you'd have a lot of options -- OwnCloud.org is a personal favorite, but there are a bunch.
If you really want to be able to edit online but save to a private server, SharePoint comes to mind first. Alfresco and its ilk are also out there, but that's enterprise-oriented. There are theoretically some ways to use OpenOffice programs in a browser (see also this) but I've never seen them in action.
Hope that gets you started. Good luck.
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There are many free online Source Control available but I would like to know your experience on it, if any, and which is the best one?
Me and my friend are starting a small test project and would like some really good online source control.
We will be developing ASP.Net app.
If you're just after a hosted source code repository:
Github
Bitbucket
If you need issue tracking, file releases, wikis, mailing lists, etc:
Sourceforge
Google Code Hosting
I've got one project at Sourceforge, and I find the amenities quite nice. You might find this comparison handy.
I'm using Unfuddle for some personal stuff to avoid issues with corporate firewalls.
You can commit over http with them.
Otherwise, use Github as already suggested.
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I notice there is an sbaz tool that seems to have similar functionality to the ruby gem tool but I don't see any community site like gemcutter.org / rubygems.org. Is there something like this around.
There are 1084 repositories on github with scala in them. I'm surprised I can't find some centralized package management utility. Perhaps I'm just googling the wrong keywords.
The closest equivalent is probably http://scala-tools.org which maintains a Maven (ivy, sbt, etc) repository of most of the best-known packages.
Scala Tools appears to no longer be functional as of this writing. It says:
We are no longer providing any support for scala-tools.org.
Instead, it is suggested to use https://oss.sonatype.org/
As Kris said, http://scala-tools.org is the closest thing so far. We're working on improving the site, and will be enabling "static project sites" shortly. There's also http://implicit.ly/ which aims to be the standard new source for published releases.