My boss bought me DataGrip today
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In my defence: I am a frontend developer.
So am I, and I still prefer CLI for everything
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So am I, and I still prefer CLI for everything
A matter of preference, really. Each side can sneer at another.
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In my defence: I am a frontend developer.
Is the CLI not a frontend?
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]DBeaver is available for Mac and Linux too. But DataGrip is pretty sweet, so good one.
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In my defence: I am a frontend developer.
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
Ah DataGrip, where my
Untitled Query
s go to never be seen again -
Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
Flatpak version seems to run stable enough for my taste, but i'm no expert when it comes to db management
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
TablePlus and Postico on macOS are where it’s at. DataGrip is shit and you’ll never get me to use it.
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
Wait. What? I never have any issues. Maybe it's because I use mssql? I love that thing. I recommended it yesterday
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
I forgot database UIs exist lol
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TablePlus and Postico on macOS are where it’s at. DataGrip is shit and you’ll never get me to use it.
You gotta drink enough Jetbrains koolaid to desire some amount of consistency when you’re jumping between projects.
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Wait. What? I never have any issues. Maybe it's because I use mssql? I love that thing. I recommended it yesterday
What’s your OS?
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
Maybe you should switch to arch. Never had a beaver crash on arch.
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Maybe you should switch to arch. Never had a beaver crash on arch.
Hell, no. This is a work laptop. I can’t justify spending days fixing some arcane bullshit that spontaneously decided to do a Leroy Jenkins.
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Hell, no. This is a work laptop. I can’t justify spending days fixing some arcane bullshit that spontaneously decided to do a Leroy Jenkins.
> Beaver does not crash
> Whole OS Crashes instead -
Hell, no. This is a work laptop. I can’t justify spending days fixing some arcane bullshit that spontaneously decided to do a Leroy Jenkins.
Arch is incredibly stable. The old meme about it needing constant attention hasn't been true for at least a decade now.
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Arch is incredibly stable. The old meme about it needing constant attention hasn't been true for at least a decade now.
I still wouldn't recommend it for business. Even when stable, the Arch philosophy is to empower the end user, whereas other distros like Ubuntu/RHEL are focused on getting stuff done. In 90% of situations the difference is immaterial. But if my client is angry and my boss is breathing down my neck, and I can't work because a thing isn't thing-a'lating, a support path is essential.
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Under Windows DBeaver is a solid (and free) tool for the casual database user. But under Linux you really learn to save your scripts often.
I like beekeeper studio.
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I still wouldn't recommend it for business. Even when stable, the Arch philosophy is to empower the end user, whereas other distros like Ubuntu/RHEL are focused on getting stuff done. In 90% of situations the difference is immaterial. But if my client is angry and my boss is breathing down my neck, and I can't work because a thing isn't thing-a'lating, a support path is essential.
But if my client is angry and my boss is breathing down my neck, and I can't work because a thing isn't thing-a'lating, a support path is essential.
Arch is still stable enough for that. The chances of something going sideways is smaller on Arch than on Windows. And unless you're a medium to large company paying Microsoft for enterprise support, you're going to be stuck with forums for community help with Windows.
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But if my client is angry and my boss is breathing down my neck, and I can't work because a thing isn't thing-a'lating, a support path is essential.
Arch is still stable enough for that. The chances of something going sideways is smaller on Arch than on Windows. And unless you're a medium to large company paying Microsoft for enterprise support, you're going to be stuck with forums for community help with Windows.
Saying the chance of something going sideways is smaller than on Windows isn’t saying much. I’ll pick a distro that’s stable by default, TYVM.