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295 points mrsuh | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.786s | source
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IX-103 ◴[] No.42136324[source]
> I wanted to see how a database management system (DBMS) stores an index in both disk and memory, and how it searches through an Index...I chose SQLite for my experiments

SQLite is a bit of an outlier in how it handles...everything, but even more so in query processing. SQLite tends to favor simplicity over performance, which causes it to implement things differently than every other DB I've worked with. You have to understand - SQLite isn't competing with other databases. It's competing with JSON and XML files for persistent storage. This means that how it implements anything tells you practically nothing about how a real database would do something.

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1. graemep ◴[] No.42138785[source]
> SQLite isn't competing with other databases. It's competing with JSON and XML files for persistent storage

It competes with both. its clearly used for local persistent storage. SO are quite a lot of other things. It also competes with other RDBMSes where a separate server process is not a requirement.

That does mean it serves very different requirements, its just that its use case are a lot wider than just replacing JSON and XML files and similar.

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2. threatofrain ◴[] No.42140986[source]
> It also competes with other RDBMSes where a separate server process is not a requirement.

If you casually list off the top DB's either by usage or by recent hotness then almost all of them will have a server, but you'll also find they're basically all not embedded DB's with exception to RocksDB.

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3. e28eta ◴[] No.42147626[source]
I’m familiar with this embedded DB, used in Quickbooks desktop: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_Anywhere

So… large usage, but probably not very high on the hotness scale