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  2. HeidiSQL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HeidiSQL

    HeidiSQL is a free and open-source administration tool for MariaDB, MySQL, as well as Microsoft SQL Server, PostgreSQL and SQLite. Its codebase was originally taken from Ansgar Becker's own MySQL-Front 2.5 software.

  3. Prepared statement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prepared_statement

    The consequence of this is that a different query plan is compiled and stored for each different length. In general, the maximum number of "duplicate" plans is the product of the lengths of the variable length columns as specified in the database. For this reason, it is important to use the standard Add method for variable length columns: command.

  4. List of column-oriented DBMSes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_column-oriented_DBMSes

    Java C-Store: C++ The last release of the original code was in 2006; Vertica a commercial fork, lives on. DuckDB: C++ An embeddable, in-process, column-oriented SQL OLAP RDBMS Databend Rust An elastic and reliable Serverless Data Warehouse InfluxDB: Rust Time series database: Greenplum Database C Support and extensions available from VMware ...

  5. Comparison of object database management systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_object...

    Name Current Stable Version Language(s) SQL support Datatypes License Description Caché: 2017.2.1 Caché ObjectScript (dynamic language), Basic. Java/.NET object mapping supported.

  6. Virtual column - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_column

    In relational databases a virtual column is a table column whose value(s) is automatically computed using other columns values, or another deterministic expression. Virtual columns are defined of SQL:2003 as Generated Column, [1] and are only implemented by some DBMSs, like MariaDB, SQL Server, Oracle, PostgreSQL, SQLite and Firebird (database server) (COMPUTED BY syntax).

  7. Block contention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_contention

    In database management systems, block contention (or data contention) refers to multiple processes or instances competing for access to the same index or data block at the same time. In general this can be caused by very frequent index or table scans, or frequent updates.

  8. Delete (SQL) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delete_(SQL)

    You can undo the operation of removing records by using the ROLLBACK command; DELETE requires a shared table lock; Triggers fire; DELETE can be used in the case of: database link; DELETE returns the number of records deleted; Transaction log - DELETE needs to read records, check constraints, update block, update indexes, and generate redo / undo.

  9. Database engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_engine

    A database engine (or storage engine) is the underlying software component that a database management system (DBMS) uses to create, read, update and delete (CRUD) data from a database. Most database management systems include their own application programming interface (API) that allows the user to interact with their underlying engine without ...