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| ▲ | WillDaSilva 2 days ago | parent | next [-] |
| It's pretty easy these days to spin up a local Postgres container. Might as well use it for prototyping too, and save yourself the hassle of switching later. |
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| ▲ | tcdent a day ago | parent [-] | | It might seem minor, but the little things add up. Make your dev environment mirror prod from the start will save you a bunch of headaches. Then, when you're ready to deploy, there is nothing to change. Even better, stage to a production-like environment early, and then deploy day can be as simple as a DNS record change. | | |
| ▲ | OccamsMirror a day ago | parent [-] | | Thanks to LetsEncrypt DNS-01, you can absolutely spin up a production-like environment with SSL and everything. It's definitely worth doing. |
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| ▲ | solarengineer 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Have you given thought to why you prototype with SQLite? I have switched to using postgres even for prototyping once I prepared some shell scripts for various setup. With hibernate (java) or knex (Javascript/NodeJS) and with unit tests (Test Driven Development approach) for code, I feel I have reduced the friction of using postgres from the beginning. |
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| ▲ | ErroneousBosh a day ago | parent [-] | | Because when I get tired of reconstructing the contents of the database between my various dev machines (at home, at work, on a remote server, on my laptop) I can just scp the sqlite db across. Because it's "low effort" to just fire it into sqlite and if I have to do ridiculous things to the schema as I footer around working out exactly what I want the database to do. I don't want to use nodejs if I can possibly avoid it and you literally could not pay me to even look at Java, there isn't enough money in the world. | | |
| ▲ | solarengineer a day ago | parent [-] | | I mentioned Hibernate and knex as examples of DB schema version control tools. Incidentally, you can rsync postgres dumps as well. That's what I do when testing and when sharing test data with team mates. At times, I decide to pgload the database dump into a different target system. My reason for sharing: I accepted that I was being lethargic about using postgres, so I just automated certain things as I went along. |
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| ▲ | nileshtrivedi a day ago | parent | prev [-] |
| I have now switched to pglite for prototyping, because it lets me use all the postgres features. |
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| ▲ | ErroneousBosh a day ago | parent [-] | | Oho, what is this pglite that I have never heard of? I already like the sound of it. | | |
| ▲ | ishandotpage a day ago | parent [-] | | `pglite` is a WASM version of postgres. I use it in one of my side projects for providing a postgres DB running in the user's browser. For most purposes, it works perfectly fine, but with two main caveats: 1. It is single user, single connection (i.e. no MVCC)
2. It doesn't support all postgres extensions (particularly postGIS), though it does support pgvector https://github.com/supabase-community/pg-gateway is something that may be used to use pglite for prototyping I guess, but I haven't used this. |
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