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author | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2022-12-03 13:24:42 -0500 |
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committer | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2022-12-03 13:24:42 -0500 |
commit | f2d2926a26d25dcc05c196148b5284c200fa67e6 (patch) | |
tree | 5a81240acd0967ea8c3e3b599eba2386e2690de8 /2022/captions | |
parent | 76a367a0a4c81c39d1a2849a78b8d63959bc0de9 (diff) | |
download | emacsconf-wiki-f2d2926a26d25dcc05c196148b5284c200fa67e6.tar.xz emacsconf-wiki-f2d2926a26d25dcc05c196148b5284c200fa67e6.zip |
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-rw-r--r-- | 2022/captions/emacsconf-2022-sqlite--using-sqlite-as-a-data-source-a-framework-and-an-example--andrew-hyatt--main.vtt | 1309 |
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diff --git a/2022/captions/emacsconf-2022-sqlite--using-sqlite-as-a-data-source-a-framework-and-an-example--andrew-hyatt--main.vtt b/2022/captions/emacsconf-2022-sqlite--using-sqlite-as-a-data-source-a-framework-and-an-example--andrew-hyatt--main.vtt new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4c3792aa --- /dev/null +++ b/2022/captions/emacsconf-2022-sqlite--using-sqlite-as-a-data-source-a-framework-and-an-example--andrew-hyatt--main.vtt @@ -0,0 +1,1309 @@ +WEBVTT captioned by sachac + +00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:08.555 +Hello. I'm Andrew Hyatt. I've been working on Emacs, + +00:00:08.556 --> 00:00:10.539 +with Emacs, and to some extent + +00:00:10.540 --> 00:00:15.272 +on Emacs for a while. I've written the WebSockets library + +00:00:15.273 --> 00:00:20.045 +and Emacs calc tutorials. I've enjoyed use of + +00:00:20.046 --> 00:00:24.640 +many of everyone's incredible packages. + +00:00:24.640 --> 00:00:27.132 +So my thesis for this talk, why I'm giving this talk, + +00:00:27.133 --> 00:00:29.060 +is that I'm interested in SQLite. + +00:00:29.061 --> 00:00:34.953 +I think we should be exploring SQLite for applications + +00:00:34.954 --> 00:00:37.482 +in ways I think the community has shied away from. + +00:00:37.483 --> 00:00:41.950 +I'd like to introduce the triples package as a way, + +00:00:41.951 --> 00:00:47.664 +both easy and with interesting functionality, + +00:00:47.665 --> 00:00:49.153 +that will allow us to build extensible databases + +00:00:49.154 --> 00:00:52.582 +in a way that is, I think, + +00:00:52.583 --> 00:00:56.220 +a little bit unusual and perhaps compelling, I hope. + +00:00:56.220 --> 00:00:59.226 +So first of all, why SQLite? + +00:00:59.227 --> 00:01:06.080 +Why is this good? Well, SQLite is now built into Emacs. + +00:01:06.080 --> 00:01:12.216 +So you get a few things out of this when you use it for data. + +00:01:12.217 --> 00:01:14.580 +First of all, it's a database. + +00:01:14.580 --> 00:01:16.369 +It's extremely good for data, of course. + +00:01:16.370 --> 00:01:19.918 +There's a simplicity to data manipulation + +00:01:19.919 --> 00:01:22.027 +using a database, compared to data manipulation, + +00:01:22.028 --> 00:01:25.196 +that is, manipulating data in a text file. + +00:01:25.197 --> 00:01:31.033 +Text files are really not built for data. + +00:01:31.034 --> 00:01:33.140 +So when typically when you need to do this, + +00:01:33.140 --> 00:01:35.026 +like I know Org Mode is-- + +00:01:35.027 --> 00:01:38.116 +which I'm a huge, huge Org Mode fan-- + +00:01:38.117 --> 00:01:41.044 +it's all about sort of data in text. + +00:01:41.045 --> 00:01:45.375 +It does work, but you certainly would be + +00:01:45.376 --> 00:01:47.360 +hard pressed to make sweeping changes + +00:01:47.360 --> 00:01:51.953 +to your database that is represented in text. + +00:01:51.954 --> 00:01:53.060 +It's just not well suited for this sort of thing. + +00:01:53.061 --> 00:01:54.963 +It would take a long time, + +00:01:54.964 --> 00:02:00.220 +where the speed of SQL is incredibly impressive. + +00:02:00.220 --> 00:02:04.429 +I think certainly Emacs is not known + +00:02:04.430 --> 00:02:06.752 +for being extremely speedy. + +00:02:06.753 --> 00:02:11.905 +I think the overuse of text + +00:02:11.906 --> 00:02:14.613 +is part of this. Of course, text and using text, + +00:02:14.614 --> 00:02:18.467 +using files has awesome advantages as well. + +00:02:18.468 --> 00:02:20.510 +I'm really here to talk about + +00:02:20.511 --> 00:02:22.717 +the other side of the coin, right? + +00:02:22.718 --> 00:02:23.961 +Everyone can judge + +00:02:23.962 --> 00:02:24.645 +those advantages and disadvantages + +00:02:24.646 --> 00:02:25.416 +and make their own trade-offs, + +00:02:25.417 --> 00:02:26.020 +but I want to kind of + +00:02:26.021 --> 00:02:29.869 +make the pitch for SQLite. + +00:02:29.870 --> 00:02:32.860 +So let's talk about the triples package. + +00:02:32.860 --> 00:02:35.488 +The triples package is a package + +00:02:35.489 --> 00:02:40.419 +that is designed to give you a very generic schema. + +00:02:40.420 --> 00:02:42.005 +You don't have to do, + +00:02:42.006 --> 00:02:43.291 +for most of the common operations, + +00:02:43.292 --> 00:02:45.516 +you don't have to write SQL yourself. + +00:02:45.517 --> 00:02:47.924 +A lot of stuff is built in + +00:02:47.925 --> 00:02:51.035 +and is based on a very generic schema. + +00:02:51.036 --> 00:02:53.840 +That is, it's a single table. + +00:02:53.840 --> 00:02:55.229 +That table has, of course, fixed schema. + +00:02:55.230 --> 00:02:57.478 +It basically has three columns. + +00:02:57.479 --> 00:03:00.867 +It actually has four columns. + +00:03:00.868 --> 00:03:01.193 +In this talk, I'm not going to get into + +00:03:01.194 --> 00:03:04.123 +the fourth column and why, but it's useful. + +00:03:04.124 --> 00:03:07.710 +So the three columns are subject, predicate, + +00:03:07.711 --> 00:03:10.361 +and object. This is what it's related to + +00:03:10.362 --> 00:03:13.908 +what we call an RDF format. + +00:03:13.909 --> 00:03:17.139 +These things basically describe a link. + +00:03:17.140 --> 00:03:20.007 +The link is from the subject to the object. + +00:03:20.008 --> 00:03:23.955 +The link type is a predicate. + +00:03:23.956 --> 00:03:26.085 +That sounds overly theoretical, + +00:03:26.086 --> 00:03:28.032 +but the point is that you can describe + +00:03:28.033 --> 00:03:32.005 +a lot of things with this format. + +00:03:32.006 --> 00:03:33.329 +You probably describe everything with it. + +00:03:33.330 --> 00:03:39.226 +It's very simple because the schema is fixed. + +00:03:39.227 --> 00:03:42.773 +It's only this kind of data. That means + +00:03:42.774 --> 00:03:44.140 +for your application, you define a schema + +00:03:44.140 --> 00:03:47.326 +in subject, predicate, object format. + +00:03:47.327 --> 00:03:50.072 +That defines what data you can use, + +00:03:50.073 --> 00:03:56.069 +what types there are, what properties they have, + +00:03:56.070 --> 00:03:57.214 +how you can use the system, + +00:03:57.215 --> 00:04:01.006 +and what is legal to do. And this is stored as data. + +00:04:01.007 --> 00:04:03.890 +I think as Lisp people, + +00:04:03.891 --> 00:04:07.540 +I think we're all very onboard + +00:04:07.540 --> 00:04:13.912 +with the fact that you have a simple way + +00:04:13.913 --> 00:04:17.660 +to express everything, and you don't have these + +00:04:17.660 --> 00:04:18.924 +two systems. In this way, + +00:04:18.925 --> 00:04:20.871 +you don't have to have code as a system. + +00:04:20.872 --> 00:04:24.825 +Do you have to load code to use the triples package + +00:04:24.826 --> 00:04:27.916 +to make sure your schema is obeyed? + +00:04:27.917 --> 00:04:35.213 +No, it's all just built in to this database. + +00:04:35.214 --> 00:04:37.036 +I'll describe this. As I said, + +00:04:37.037 --> 00:04:39.860 +it's a little bit abstract right now, + +00:04:39.860 --> 00:04:42.048 +but it will become a lot clearer + +00:04:42.049 --> 00:04:46.778 +when we go through an example, + +00:04:46.779 --> 00:04:50.208 +which we're going to do now. + +00:04:50.209 --> 00:04:56.660 +As an exercise, let's create Emacs bookmarks, + +00:04:56.660 --> 00:04:57.345 +which basically are three things: + +00:04:57.346 --> 00:05:01.038 +a name, a file, and an annotation. + +00:05:01.039 --> 00:05:02.364 +I may be missing out on functionality. + +00:05:02.365 --> 00:05:04.772 +Of course, everything in Emacs, + +00:05:04.773 --> 00:05:05.140 +everything has lots and lots of functionality, + +00:05:05.140 --> 00:05:08.049 +but let's just start with this simple thing. + +00:05:08.050 --> 00:05:11.100 +First of all, we're going to open up a database. + +00:05:11.100 --> 00:05:12.103 +Pretty simple. + +00:05:12.104 --> 00:05:15.014 +I think there's nothing to explain there. + +00:05:15.015 --> 00:05:19.106 +But here on this line that I'm on right now, + +00:05:19.107 --> 00:05:21.432 +we are saying, okay, there's going to be + +00:05:21.433 --> 00:05:24.839 +a type called bookmark. + +00:05:24.840 --> 00:05:26.826 +It's going to have the following properties. + +00:05:26.827 --> 00:05:29.178 +First, a file, which is unique and a string. + +00:05:29.179 --> 00:05:31.764 +The second is an annotation, + +00:05:31.765 --> 00:05:34.317 +which is again unique and a string. + +00:05:34.318 --> 00:05:37.864 +Then we're going to have another type called named. + +00:05:37.865 --> 00:05:39.808 +First of all, why is it named as part of bookmark? + +00:05:39.809 --> 00:05:45.562 +As I'll get into, it's interesting + +00:05:45.563 --> 00:05:48.511 +when you start sharing this database + +00:05:48.512 --> 00:05:51.365 +with other things, not just bookmarks, but other types. + +00:05:51.366 --> 00:05:54.616 +Bookmarks are very similar to many other things + +00:05:54.617 --> 00:05:56.723 +that you might want to expand into. + +00:05:56.724 --> 00:05:57.086 +Those other things have names, + +00:05:57.087 --> 00:05:58.269 +but they're not bookmarks. + +00:05:58.270 --> 00:06:04.123 +It's nice to separate these concerns out + +00:06:04.124 --> 00:06:08.372 +and just have another type called named, + +00:06:08.373 --> 00:06:12.780 +which just basically has a name. + +00:06:12.780 --> 00:06:15.746 +We can execute this. + +00:06:15.747 --> 00:06:21.798 +It's not interesting to look at these. + +00:06:21.440 --> 00:06:25.907 +that is not all that useful for anything, + +00:06:21.799 --> 00:06:21.439 +It outputs something + +00:06:25.908 --> 00:06:28.014 +but that's okay. What's done is, actually, + +00:06:28.015 --> 00:06:32.262 +it's created a database + +00:06:32.263 --> 00:06:34.045 +and it's populated it with the schema. + +00:06:34.046 --> 00:06:41.478 +We can look at this. + +00:06:41.479 --> 00:06:43.602 +We won't go through all of this + +00:06:43.603 --> 00:06:44.188 +because it's a little bit too much + +00:06:44.189 --> 00:06:46.036 +for a short presentation like this, + +00:06:46.037 --> 00:06:48.185 +but you could see that there's something here + +00:06:48.186 --> 00:06:52.500 +that's like, oh, we have a subject bookmark. + +00:06:52.500 --> 00:06:56.031 +We have a property base/type. + +00:06:56.032 --> 00:06:58.878 +That just means that there's a property + +00:06:58.879 --> 00:07:00.562 +that's defined by the base. + +00:07:00.563 --> 00:07:02.248 +This means this is from the triples package itself. + +00:07:02.249 --> 00:07:08.940 +It's not some other package. + +00:07:08.940 --> 00:07:11.525 +Third is, what is the type of this object? + +00:07:11.526 --> 00:07:17.060 +It's a schema. This thing could be many types. + +00:07:17.060 --> 00:07:19.150 +As I said, if you have a-- + +00:07:19.151 --> 00:07:20.235 +we haven't seen an example yet, + +00:07:20.236 --> 00:07:21.100 +but if you have a bookmark, + +00:07:21.100 --> 00:07:23.686 +it's going to have a name type + +00:07:23.687 --> 00:07:25.694 +and a bookmark type. + +00:07:25.695 --> 00:07:26.719 +Everything is multi-typed + +00:07:26.720 --> 00:07:28.146 +and that's kind of a feature + +00:07:28.147 --> 00:07:32.137 +of this kind of storage system. + +00:07:32.138 --> 00:07:33.140 +I'm not going to go through everything, + +00:07:33.140 --> 00:07:35.865 +but you can see it's all there in triples, + +00:07:35.866 --> 00:07:40.740 +the whole schema, everything we just did. + +00:07:40.740 --> 00:07:42.645 +Let's create a bookmark. Again, + +00:07:42.646 --> 00:07:46.997 +we're going to connect to our database + +00:07:46.998 --> 00:07:49.246 +and we're going to basically set + +00:07:49.247 --> 00:07:52.552 +an entire subject. + +00:07:52.553 --> 00:07:54.239 +The subject is, it's basically like an entity. + +00:07:54.240 --> 00:07:56.105 +We're going to define a whole entity + +00:07:56.106 --> 00:08:00.676 +or you could refer to it as an object. + +00:08:00.677 --> 00:08:03.909 +That's a perfectly fine way to look at it, I think. + +00:08:03.910 --> 00:08:04.356 +It's going to have some identifier. + +00:08:04.357 --> 00:08:06.723 +That identifier could be anything. + +00:08:06.724 --> 00:08:07.431 +It doesn't have to be a string. + +00:08:07.432 --> 00:08:09.260 +It could really be anything, but we're going + +00:08:09.260 --> 00:08:11.369 +to give it a string called emacs-init. + +00:08:11.370 --> 00:08:13.298 +It does not matter what this identifier is, + +00:08:13.299 --> 00:08:17.808 +at least for our purposes. + +00:08:17.809 --> 00:08:19.914 +It does matter when you're linking to it, + +00:08:19.915 --> 00:08:22.263 +but I think nothing that I'm about to show you. + +00:08:22.264 --> 00:08:25.830 +This could truly be anything + +00:08:25.831 --> 00:08:28.180 +because it has a separate name. + +00:08:28.180 --> 00:08:32.131 +I'm giving it a name here, which is init. + +00:08:32.133 --> 00:08:34.917 +I'm just specifying the named type here + +00:08:34.918 --> 00:08:38.047 +and I'm specifying the bookmark type here + +00:08:38.048 --> 00:08:43.219 +and its values. We're going to do that. + +00:08:43.220 --> 00:08:47.769 +Now, if we look, we see everything we saw before, + +00:08:47.770 --> 00:08:52.246 +but now we have subject emacs-init. + +00:08:52.247 --> 00:08:55.973 +It has a type and it's named. + +00:08:55.974 --> 00:08:57.220 +We also see the same thing two lines down. + +00:08:57.220 --> 00:08:58.264 +This type is also a bookmark, + +00:08:58.265 --> 00:09:02.819 +but the name is init in the named/name, + +00:09:02.820 --> 00:09:05.966 +which is like the type is name, named, + +00:09:05.967 --> 00:09:08.752 +and the property is name. It's init. + +00:09:08.753 --> 00:09:12.661 +As you can see, this is just + +00:09:12.662 --> 00:09:16.331 +how everything looks. + +00:09:16.332 --> 00:09:18.356 +It's pretty straightforward + +00:09:18.357 --> 00:09:19.318 +and you can retrieve it. + +00:09:19.319 --> 00:09:21.603 +Now, we're looking at the database, + +00:09:21.604 --> 00:09:22.689 +but you don't really have to + +00:09:22.690 --> 00:09:23.218 +look at the database for... In fact, + +00:09:23.219 --> 00:09:24.222 +I think we're done looking + +00:09:24.223 --> 00:09:25.105 +at the triples format, + +00:09:25.106 --> 00:09:29.718 +because I think it's very simple. + +00:09:29.719 --> 00:09:31.365 +You've already got the hang of it, I think. + +00:09:31.366 --> 00:09:33.069 +Let's retrieve that just to make sure, yes, + +00:09:33.070 --> 00:09:37.980 +we can retrieve it. + +00:09:37.981 --> 00:09:38.247 +We're going to retrieve it and say, okay, + +00:09:38.248 --> 00:09:43.286 +what do we get when we load the emacs-init subject? + +00:09:43.287 --> 00:09:48.697 +Well, we get a plist of all of its properties, + +00:09:48.698 --> 00:09:55.630 +which then you can use in your application. + +00:09:55.631 --> 00:09:57.455 +There's many more ways to retrieve + +00:09:57.456 --> 00:09:59.379 +and there's many more ways to save. + +00:09:59.380 --> 00:10:01.904 +In fact, I think the way I did it here + +00:10:01.905 --> 00:10:04.015 +with set subject is probably not + +00:10:04.016 --> 00:10:06.781 +the right way to do it most of the time. + +00:10:06.782 --> 00:10:08.127 +It's usually because it'll erase everything. + +00:10:08.128 --> 00:10:13.740 +It's only really to be used when + +00:10:13.740 --> 00:10:15.710 +you're sure you control all the data, + +00:10:15.711 --> 00:10:16.399 +but you're never sure because there could be + +00:10:16.400 --> 00:10:19.610 +other packages that are also using this database, + +00:10:19.611 --> 00:10:20.695 +they could have their own data. + +00:10:20.696 --> 00:10:21.342 +You don't want to erase + +00:10:21.343 --> 00:10:25.014 +all the other Emacs init subject data. + +00:10:25.015 --> 00:10:27.699 +In this case, we did because + +00:10:27.700 --> 00:10:30.810 +we are confident it was a new entity, + +00:10:30.811 --> 00:10:31.335 +but in most cases, the right thing to do is + +00:10:31.336 --> 00:10:34.289 +just set it by type. Just say, + +00:10:34.290 --> 00:10:36.676 +we're just going to set the bookmark type, + +00:10:36.677 --> 00:10:37.222 +which is... The properties are this, + +00:10:37.223 --> 00:10:38.104 +and then the name type + +00:10:38.105 --> 00:10:42.814 +and the properties are that. + +00:10:42.815 --> 00:10:44.900 +That's a way that you could do things. + +00:10:44.900 --> 00:10:48.526 +There's also many retrieval types. + +00:10:48.527 --> 00:10:53.755 +The retrieval types: + +00:10:53.756 --> 00:10:56.403 +you can retrieve by a number of different ways, + +00:10:56.404 --> 00:10:58.869 +which I'm not going to get into, + +00:10:58.870 --> 00:11:01.241 +but you can read about in either the source + +00:11:01.242 --> 00:11:10.033 +or the readme in the package. + +00:11:10.034 --> 00:11:14.539 +We have backlinks as well. + +00:11:14.540 --> 00:11:15.862 +Let me explain what backlinks are. + +00:11:15.863 --> 00:11:17.172 +There's another feature of the triples. + +00:11:17.173 --> 00:11:19.860 +As I mentioned, these things + +00:11:19.861 --> 00:11:21.849 +can be thought about as links, + +00:11:21.850 --> 00:11:23.797 +but what could be a link in one direction + +00:11:23.798 --> 00:11:25.804 +could also be a link in the other direction, + +00:11:25.805 --> 00:11:28.395 +and we basically get this for free. + +00:11:28.396 --> 00:11:33.807 +Here's an example where we are again + +00:11:33.808 --> 00:11:35.752 +connecting toward bookmark. Here we're going to + +00:11:35.753 --> 00:11:38.223 +add a new type called tagged. + +00:11:38.224 --> 00:11:41.613 +We're going to give everything in tags. + +00:11:41.614 --> 00:11:45.524 +Here we're saying, okay, there's a type called tagged + +00:11:45.525 --> 00:11:49.234 +and it has a property called tags. + +00:11:49.235 --> 00:11:52.060 +This is not unique, so it's a list basically. + +00:11:52.060 --> 00:11:54.326 +It's a list of string. + +00:11:54.327 --> 00:11:58.675 +There also is a type called tag. + +00:11:58.676 --> 00:12:01.402 +This is for things that are tags themselves. + +00:12:01.403 --> 00:12:06.127 +Then it has a type called numbers + +00:12:06.128 --> 00:12:18.003 +and it has what we call a virtual reversed property. + +00:12:18.004 --> 00:12:21.075 +It's virtual because it's not actually stored. + +00:12:21.076 --> 00:12:23.741 +We just compute it by reversing + +00:12:23.742 --> 00:12:24.306 +the subject and the object. + +00:12:24.307 --> 00:12:29.260 +This is on tagged tags. When we query this, + +00:12:29.260 --> 00:12:32.006 +we can just say, okay, + +00:12:32.007 --> 00:12:33.268 +what are all the subjects + +00:12:33.269 --> 00:12:38.859 +that have tagged tags of me, the tag? + +00:12:38.860 --> 00:12:39.365 +In fact, let me demonstrate that for you. + +00:12:39.366 --> 00:12:42.139 +We're going to set the type on emacs-init. + +00:12:42.140 --> 00:12:45.070 +We're going to add the "tagged" type. + +00:12:45.071 --> 00:12:47.017 +This is the alternate way of setting data + +00:12:47.018 --> 00:12:48.740 +that I mentioned. + +00:12:48.740 --> 00:12:49.924 +This won't erase anything else. + +00:12:49.925 --> 00:12:51.752 +We're just adding something here. + +00:12:51.753 --> 00:12:54.742 +We're adding this type "tagged" + +00:12:54.743 --> 00:12:59.953 +to our previous bookmark emacs-init. + +00:12:59.954 --> 00:13:01.058 +We're going to add emacs and config + +00:13:01.059 --> 00:13:06.866 +as the tags. We're going to then + +00:13:06.867 --> 00:13:11.095 +set emacs as a tag and config as a tag. + +00:13:11.096 --> 00:13:15.385 +That just lets us have this virtual property. + +00:13:15.386 --> 00:13:16.389 +You have to do something. + +00:13:16.390 --> 00:13:18.733 +You can't get it out of thin air. + +00:13:18.734 --> 00:13:23.426 +The design decision we've made is: + +00:13:23.427 --> 00:13:25.508 +you at least need to tag it + +00:13:25.509 --> 00:13:32.660 +before you get the free property. + +00:13:32.660 --> 00:13:35.631 +What you should see... Let's try it out. + +00:13:35.632 --> 00:13:36.037 +We got the subject config, + +00:13:36.038 --> 00:13:37.261 +which we've set no data on. + +00:13:37.262 --> 00:13:40.668 +You can tell we're not sending any data. + +00:13:40.669 --> 00:13:44.820 +If I get that subject, the result is that + +00:13:44.821 --> 00:13:46.068 +it says its members are emacs-init. + +00:13:46.069 --> 00:13:49.878 +That's what a virtual reverse property. + +00:13:49.879 --> 00:13:53.606 +As we tag more things, this just + +00:13:53.607 --> 00:13:55.151 +continues to work because it's just doing + +00:13:55.152 --> 00:13:59.380 +a SQL query here. + +00:13:59.380 --> 00:14:01.985 +Besides showing off the backlinks function, + +00:14:01.986 --> 00:14:04.175 +this also shows off the general way + +00:14:04.176 --> 00:14:07.863 +you can have extensible entities. + +00:14:07.864 --> 00:14:09.391 +That is, it's possible that someone writes + +00:14:09.392 --> 00:14:13.062 +a bookmarks package that stores everything + +00:14:13.063 --> 00:14:18.054 +in a database, in the triples database, + +00:14:18.055 --> 00:14:21.521 +but then someone else can come and say, + +00:14:21.522 --> 00:14:23.590 +okay, I'm going to define my own types + +00:14:23.591 --> 00:14:25.739 +that's meant to work with this database, + +00:14:25.740 --> 00:14:28.507 +just like someone could do what I did here, + +00:14:28.508 --> 00:14:30.874 +just to add simple tagging. + +00:14:30.875 --> 00:14:32.900 +It's very easy to do. + +00:14:32.901 --> 00:14:35.931 +This stuff is not that easy to do otherwise. + +00:14:35.932 --> 00:14:38.961 +To do this in Lisp, I would say it's a little awkward. + +00:14:38.962 --> 00:14:42.673 +With databases, again, it's not only possible, + +00:14:42.674 --> 00:14:43.498 +it's relatively trivial, + +00:14:43.499 --> 00:14:49.828 +especially with this kind of database. + +00:14:49.829 --> 00:14:53.056 +The benefit is it's super easy to work with. + +00:14:53.057 --> 00:14:56.041 +With this kind of generic database, + +00:14:56.042 --> 00:15:00.311 +the drawback is it's not all that efficient + +00:15:00.312 --> 00:15:04.381 +as a special purpose table + +00:15:04.382 --> 00:15:06.191 +that is really built for efficiencies. + +00:15:06.192 --> 00:15:08.820 +A lot of times you have to do multiple lookups + +00:15:08.820 --> 00:15:09.442 +and things like that. + +00:15:09.443 --> 00:15:11.985 +Again, it's a trade-off for various things. + +00:15:11.986 --> 00:15:19.900 +As you can see, this is like + +00:15:19.901 --> 00:15:22.066 +one database for everything. + +00:15:22.067 --> 00:15:29.178 +That means that we don't have to all + +00:15:29.179 --> 00:15:31.944 +contribute to one giant database. + +00:15:31.945 --> 00:15:33.052 +All the packages that use triples, + +00:15:33.053 --> 00:15:35.180 +it doesn't have to be one database, + +00:15:35.180 --> 00:15:37.086 +but it's cool if it does. + +00:15:37.087 --> 00:15:39.393 +I don't know what I want to happen + +00:15:39.394 --> 00:15:41.220 +or what I expect to happen, + +00:15:41.220 --> 00:15:43.068 +but I think an interesting property is that + +00:15:43.069 --> 00:15:45.400 +this is a way for lots of data to live together + +00:15:45.400 --> 00:15:49.606 +and build off each other in ways that I think + +00:15:49.607 --> 00:15:55.780 +are hard to do with other forms of table layouts + +00:15:55.780 --> 00:15:57.007 +and things like that. + +00:15:57.008 --> 00:15:59.653 +Let's talk about a use of it, + +00:15:59.654 --> 00:16:02.643 +which is the EKG package. + +00:16:02.644 --> 00:16:04.589 +The EKG package is something I've written + +00:16:04.590 --> 00:16:07.780 +to demonstrate the triples library + +00:16:07.780 --> 00:16:09.409 +and use it for something I think is interesting, + +00:16:09.410 --> 00:16:12.420 +which is personal knowledge management systems + +00:16:12.420 --> 00:16:14.384 +of the same type, of the same genre + +00:16:14.385 --> 00:16:15.286 +that Org Roam is, + +00:16:15.287 --> 00:16:18.433 +but with different design decisions. + +00:16:18.434 --> 00:16:26.531 +I'll show it in action for a little bit. + +00:16:26.532 --> 00:16:28.359 +Let's just look at... it's all tag-based, + +00:16:28.360 --> 00:16:30.185 +same kind of tags we saw before + +00:16:30.186 --> 00:16:32.232 +when we were playing around + +00:16:32.233 --> 00:16:35.560 +with the bookmarks example application, + +00:16:35.224 --> 00:16:37.475 +What I want to show is: I can look at a tag. + +00:16:35.560 --> 00:16:35.223 +but everything here is... + +00:16:37.476 --> 00:16:40.287 +I could see notes with that tag. + +00:16:40.288 --> 00:16:42.632 +Everything you see here is in the database, + +00:16:42.633 --> 00:16:43.198 +no files involved. + +00:16:43.199 --> 00:16:46.404 +All of this is just a thing + +00:16:46.405 --> 00:16:49.390 +that's an entire object, the entire string. + +00:16:49.391 --> 00:16:56.081 +It works. It has tags. + +00:16:56.082 --> 00:16:59.229 +You can see not only this tag, + +00:16:59.230 --> 00:17:01.354 +but all the other tags associated with it + +00:17:01.355 --> 00:17:04.860 +and their notes. + +00:17:04.860 --> 00:17:10.255 +It's kind of an interesting way to do things. + +00:17:10.256 --> 00:17:12.260 +When you capture it, I think it's interesting. + +00:17:12.260 --> 00:17:22.275 +There's a lot of interesting design elements here. + +00:17:22.276 --> 00:17:25.819 +This tags thing is not part of the buffer. + +00:17:25.819 --> 00:17:28.751 +It's not like Org Roam. + +00:17:28.752 --> 00:17:29.116 +You see here in this other tags, + +00:17:29.117 --> 00:17:31.924 +these are things I've imported from Org Roam. + +00:17:31.925 --> 00:17:32.230 +This is why they look like they do. + +00:17:32.231 --> 00:17:34.020 +They have their own titles because + +00:17:34.020 --> 00:17:37.889 +I just wrote them all in Org Roam. + +00:17:37.890 --> 00:17:39.457 +What it looks like, really, for these notes + +00:17:39.458 --> 00:17:41.023 +is that it's just text. + +00:17:41.024 --> 00:17:44.615 +You really don't have to bother with this metadata. + +00:17:44.616 --> 00:17:46.282 +If I want another tag like pancakes, + +00:17:46.283 --> 00:17:53.654 +I can just add it here. Again, these tags + +00:17:53.655 --> 00:17:56.740 +will turn into data, triple data. + +00:17:56.740 --> 00:17:59.825 +The text is just a triple date[??] as well, + +00:17:59.826 --> 00:18:01.969 +but different to triple data. + +00:18:01.970 --> 00:18:08.362 +All these things are like that. + +00:18:08.363 --> 00:18:12.771 +You can open up any of these things, et cetera. + +00:18:12.772 --> 00:18:16.682 +I think the interesting thing here + +00:18:16.683 --> 00:18:22.596 +is to see the code. It's not super interesting + +00:18:22.597 --> 00:18:23.980 +to look at code for too long, + +00:18:23.980 --> 00:18:26.991 +but we don't have that long. + +00:18:26.992 --> 00:18:27.654 +Whenever we connect-- + +00:18:27.655 --> 00:18:28.819 +I just want to point out a few things. + +00:18:28.820 --> 00:18:29.205 +Whenever we connect, we have a schema. + +00:18:29.206 --> 00:18:31.175 +We just do this. Every time we connect, + +00:18:31.176 --> 00:18:33.163 +we just make sure it has the right schema. + +00:18:33.164 --> 00:18:36.314 +This way, the user is up to date. + +00:18:36.315 --> 00:18:38.300 +This schema just looks exactly like + +00:18:38.301 --> 00:18:41.687 +stuff I showed you in the triples + +00:18:41.688 --> 00:18:43.532 +when we were looking at bookmarks. + +00:18:43.533 --> 00:18:45.100 +It's not complicated. + +00:18:45.100 --> 00:18:48.210 +I even have stuff here with people + +00:18:48.211 --> 00:18:51.538 +to use this as a person database. + +00:18:51.539 --> 00:18:52.104 +I haven't figured out how I'm going to use this yet, + +00:18:52.105 --> 00:18:54.273 +but you can see just to do this, + +00:18:54.274 --> 00:19:01.913 +it's really trivial and it's pretty easy. + +00:19:01.914 --> 00:19:02.498 +Let's show a few other things, + +00:19:02.499 --> 00:19:05.844 +like getting all the tags. + +00:19:05.845 --> 00:19:07.990 +Here, we could just say, + +00:19:07.991 --> 00:19:10.379 +let's get the subjects of type tag. + +00:19:10.380 --> 00:19:12.902 +We have all the triples, + +00:19:12.903 --> 00:19:15.849 +all the ones that are of type tag, + +00:19:15.850 --> 00:19:18.777 +all the things that have a subject. + +00:19:18.778 --> 00:19:22.145 +All the subjects that have links, + +00:19:22.146 --> 00:19:28.337 +that have this type, this tag in it, + +00:19:28.338 --> 00:19:30.660 +we can return them all. + +00:19:30.426 --> 00:19:32.674 +of all these objects. + +00:19:30.660 --> 00:19:30.425 +Basically, it just gives you a list + +00:19:32.675 --> 00:19:33.243 +Again, you can think of these things as objects. + +00:19:33.244 --> 00:19:35.433 +All the objects of type tag, + +00:19:35.434 --> 00:19:37.320 +we'll just get them all. Super, super simple. + +00:19:37.321 --> 00:19:39.585 +Triples gives you this functionality + +00:19:39.586 --> 00:19:43.780 +out of the box. It's not that complicated. + +00:19:43.780 --> 00:19:45.167 +What I would like to show, + +00:19:45.168 --> 00:19:49.518 +and that shows my thesis for this whole talk, + +00:19:49.519 --> 00:19:52.785 +is this rename tag. Now, think about + +00:19:52.786 --> 00:19:54.150 +how you would rename a tag in Org Roam + +00:19:54.151 --> 00:20:03.013 +or anything where the tag is part of the files. + +00:20:03.014 --> 00:20:05.280 +It's like how you would re-tag everything + +00:20:05.280 --> 00:20:09.869 +in Org Mode. It's complicated and error-prone + +00:20:09.870 --> 00:20:12.556 +and slow. This is anything, + +00:20:12.557 --> 00:20:14.763 +this is instantaneous and super easy. + +00:20:14.764 --> 00:20:17.255 +Look, that's it. There's not that many places + +00:20:17.256 --> 00:20:19.540 +for an error to live here. + +00:20:19.540 --> 00:20:21.507 +One thing I would like to point out + +00:20:21.508 --> 00:20:23.337 +is that we are doing direct, + +00:20:23.338 --> 00:20:24.320 +not everything has to go through + +00:20:24.321 --> 00:20:28.292 +the triples package. Maybe it should, + +00:20:28.293 --> 00:20:31.660 +but the triples package is a fixed format, + +00:20:31.660 --> 00:20:33.906 +which is why it's okay-- + +00:20:33.907 --> 00:20:34.069 +whether it's a good idea, I'm not sure, + +00:20:34.070 --> 00:20:39.863 +but it's okay for client packages + +00:20:39.864 --> 00:20:42.833 +to just directly manipulate the tables. + +00:20:42.834 --> 00:20:43.937 +Here, we're just doing it just to + +00:20:43.938 --> 00:20:45.265 +update all the tags + +00:20:45.266 --> 00:20:47.891 +and then remove and set types + +00:20:47.892 --> 00:20:49.119 +so that the correct thing happens. + +00:20:49.120 --> 00:20:52.146 +As you can see, it's super, super simple. + +00:20:52.147 --> 00:20:55.374 +I think this proves my thesis about + +00:20:55.375 --> 00:21:01.526 +the advantages of applications with SQLite. + +00:21:01.527 --> 00:21:02.430 +Thank you for listening. + +00:21:02.431 --> 00:21:05.876 +I hope this puts ideas in your minds + +00:21:05.877 --> 00:21:09.827 +about taking advantage of this functionality. + +00:21:09.828 --> 00:21:11.935 +I hope to see more things + +00:21:11.936 --> 00:21:12.180 +using the triples library + +00:21:12.180 --> 00:21:16.017 +or otherwise that take advantage of this. + +00:21:16.018 --> 00:21:17.660 +Thank you for your time. |