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Database Management Library (DBL) is a relational database management system (RDBMS) contained in a C++ programming library. The DBL source code is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License. DBL was fully developed within two weeks, as a holiday programming project. It aims to be easy and simple to use for C++ programming.
Java, C, C++, JDBC, ODBC, SQL Proprietary Altibase is a hybrid DBMS that combines an in-memory database with a conventional disk-resident database in a single unified engine. It supports full ACID properties and standard connectivity interfaces such as JDBC and ODBC, as well as interoperability.
C++ Language Binding. This defined a C++ binding of the ODMG ODL and a C++ Object Manipulation Language (OML). The C++ ODL was expressed as a library that provides classes and functions to implement the concepts defined in the ODMG Object Model. The C++ OML syntax and semantics are those of standard C++ in the context of the standard class library.
C++ ClickHouse: C++ Released in 2016 to analyze data that is updated in real time CrateDB: 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
Berkeley DB, the C database library that is the subject of this article Berkeley DB Java Edition, [ 15 ] a pure Java library whose design is modelled after the C library but is otherwise unrelated Berkeley DB XML, [ 16 ] a C++ program that supports XQuery , and which includes a legacy version of the C database library
Base One Foundation Component Library, free or commercial; Dapper, open source; Entity Framework, included in .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 and above; iBATIS, free open source, maintained by ASF but now inactive. LINQ to SQL, included in .NET Framework 3.5; NHibernate, open source; nHydrate, open source; Quick Objects, free or commercial
Metakit is an embedded database library with a small footprint. It fills the gap between flat-file, relational, object-oriented, and tree-structured databases, supporting relational joins, serialization, nested structures, and instant schema evolution. Interfaces for C++ (native), Python and Tcl are the most used.
Generally these systems operated together with a simple command processor that allowed users to type in English-like commands, and receive output. The best-known examples are SQL from IBM and QUEL from the Ingres project. These systems may or may not allow other applications to access the data directly, and those that did use a wide variety of ...