Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry)
От | Alvaro Herrera |
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Тема | Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 20050518231017.GC10521@surnet.cl обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry) (Stephen Frost <sfrost@snowman.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry)
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Список | pgsql-hackers |
On Wed, May 18, 2005 at 05:19:55PM -0400, Stephen Frost wrote: > * Lamar Owen (lowen@pari.edu) wrote: > > On Tuesday 17 May 2005 01:41, Josh Berkus wrote: > > > > > To put it much more bluntly: PostgreSQL development (both the process > > > > > and the codebase) has one of the steepest learning curves around, > > > > > You haven't looked at the OpenOffice.org code. <wince> > > > > Yes, I have. Yes, it's steeper. > > That seems rather odd to me. I havn't really looked at the > OpenOffice.org code very much but generally I've found the PostgreSQL > code to be pretty well commented and generally well thought-out. I've > also found the acceptance, understanding and hand-holding of the > PostgreSQL developers to be *better* than I've found in other > communities (such as the Linux kernel...) that I've developed and have > had code included in. Certainly the code is exceptionally beautiful. Anyone who has seen both Postgres' and MySQL sources can confirm that I think. Now *that* is an unreadable mess :-( > I havn't actually gotten anything real into PostgreSQL *yet*, but I've > been spending a fair bit of time on implementing support for SQL Roles > and have had alot of help developing the approach for best implementing > it (thanks Tom!) and help with stupid questions (what's a tuple?) from > a couple developers on IRC (thanks Neil! thanks Andrew!). Say, how are you doing on that front? -- Alvaro Herrera (<alvherre[a]surnet.cl>) "No es bueno caminar con un hombre muerto"
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