Originally posted by BR14
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Previously on "MySQL or PostgreSQL for high-volume high-performance database?"
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Call me crude but unless you have less than no money or are working on some kind of massive data real time thing it's probably not going not matter.
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostYep, most of clientco's clients send them data in CSV format.
But most of the baboons who write the code to produce the CSV seem to have no idea there is a CSV standard. So we have endless problems with the data (although it all helps keep me in contract!)
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Originally posted by fullyautomatix View PostIf you talking high volume high performance in the context of a financial app handling millions of transactions, MySQL and PostGre do not come any close to Apache Cassandra. In fact even Oracle and MSSQL struggle to cope.
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostCSV
But most of the baboons who write the code to produce the CSV seem to have no idea there is a CSV standard. So we have endless problems with the data (although it all helps keep me in contract!)
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MySQL is owned by Oracle. Ergo MySQL will never be as good as Oracle as it will be hampered. Therefore PostgreSQL could always become better.
Also MySQL is very bloated since Oracle took over and I hate that. Went from 5MB download to over 80MB almost overnight. I guess it’s probably a gig by now.
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If you talking high volume high performance in the context of a financial app handling millions of transactions, MySQL and PostGre do not come any close to Apache Cassandra. In fact even Oracle and MSSQL struggle to cope.
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I haven't done much backend work in recent years (mostly mobile) but PostgreSQL is my goto choice (except for tiny projects where I might even use sqlite). I can't remember the last time I used MySQL. Possibly before Oracle bought it.
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MySQL 8 apparently introduces a lot of new features: https://mysqlserverteam.com/whats-ne...lly-available/
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