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databases/bdb-0.6.6 (Score: 0.09045241)
Ruby interface to Oracle Berkeley DB revision 2 or later
Ruby-bdb is an interface to Sleepycat's Berkeley DB revision 2 or later. DB >= 2 is required. (some functionalities like join are not available with DB < 2.6)
databases/RMySQL-0.10.9 (Score: 0.09045241)
R interface to the MySQL database
RMySQL is a database interface and MySQL driver for R. This version complies with the database interface definition as implemented in the package DBI 0.2-2.
databases/RSQLite.extfuns-0.0.1 (Score: 0.09045241)
SQLite extension functions for RSQLite
This package uses SQLite's loadable extension feature to provide a number of additional SQL functions and aggregates within R
databases/RSQLite-1.0.0 (Score: 0.09045241)
Database Interface R driver for SQLite
Database Interface R driver for SQLite. This package embeds the SQLite database engine in R and provides an interface compliant with the DBI package.
databases/sqldf-0.4.7.1 (Score: 0.09045241)
SQL select on R data frames
sqldf is an R package for runing SQL statements on R data frames, optimized for convenience. The user simply specifies an SQL statement in R using data frame names in place of table names and a database with appropriate table layouts/schema is automatically created, the data frames are automatically loaded into the database, the specified SQL statement is performed, the result is read back into R and the database is deleted all automatically behind the scenes making the database's existence transparent to the user who only specifies the SQL statement.
databases/postgis-jdbc-2.1.7 (Score: 0.09045241)
PostGIS spatial data structures for JDBC
PostGIS-JDBC provides the spatial data structures needed to use PostgreSQL-JDBC with spatial tables.
databases/postgresql-09.05.0400 (Score: 0.09045241)
PostgreSQL ODBC driver
The official ODBC driver for connecting to PostgreSQL Database; not a part of the PostgreSQL Database distribution, though -- developed and maintained separately.
databases/adminer-4.2.5 (Score: 0.09045241)
Full-featured database management tool written in PHP
Adminer (formerly phpMinAdmin) is a full-featured database management tool written in PHP. Conversely to phpMyAdmin, it consist of a single file ready to deploy to the target server. Adminer is available for MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite, MS SQL and Oracle.
databases/postgresql-9.3.14 (Score: 0.09045241)
The most advanced open-source database available anywhere
PostgreSQL is a sophisticated Object-Relational DBMS, supporting almost all SQL constructs, including subselects, transactions, and user-defined types and functions. It is the most advanced open-source database available anywhere. Commercial Support is also available. The original Postgres code was the effort of many graduate students, undergraduate students, and staff programmers working under the direction of Professor Michael Stonebraker at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1995, Andrew Yu and Jolly Chen took on the task of converting the DBMS query language to SQL and created a new database system which came to known as Postgres95. Many others contributed to the porting, testing, debugging and enhancement of the Postgres95 code. As the code improved, and 1995 faded into memory, PostgreSQL was born. PostgreSQL development is presently being performed by a team of Internet developers who are now responsible for all current and future development. The development team coordinator is Marc G. Fournier (scrappy@PostgreSQL.ORG). Support is available from the PostgreSQL developer/user community through the support mailing list (questions@PostgreSQL.ORG). PostgreSQL is free and the complete source is available.
databases/postgresql-9.4.9 (Score: 0.09045241)
The most advanced open-source database available anywhere
PostgreSQL is a sophisticated Object-Relational DBMS, supporting almost all SQL constructs, including subselects, transactions, and user-defined types and functions. It is the most advanced open-source database available anywhere. Commercial Support is also available. The original Postgres code was the effort of many graduate students, undergraduate students, and staff programmers working under the direction of Professor Michael Stonebraker at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1995, Andrew Yu and Jolly Chen took on the task of converting the DBMS query language to SQL and created a new database system which came to known as Postgres95. Many others contributed to the porting, testing, debugging and enhancement of the Postgres95 code. As the code improved, and 1995 faded into memory, PostgreSQL was born. PostgreSQL development is presently being performed by a team of Internet developers who are now responsible for all current and future development. The development team coordinator is Marc G. Fournier (scrappy@PostgreSQL.ORG). Support is available from the PostgreSQL developer/user community through the support mailing list (questions@PostgreSQL.ORG). PostgreSQL is free and the complete source is available.