Exactly. SQL is the roman numerals of relational databases. On Sep 14, 2021, 13:08 -0700, Raymond Brinzer <ray.brin...@gmail.com>, wrote: > On Tue, Sep 14, 2021 at 3:58 PM Guyren Howe <guy...@gmail.com> wrote: > > You’re confusing SQL with the relational model. Datalog and Quel and > > Tutorial D and other database languages and systems can and did provide > > those features also. > > By analogy: Arabic and Roman numerals both describe the natural > numbers. Hence, they have the same mathematical properties. Spending > a little time doing algebra with Roman numerals should convince > anyone, however, that how you express a concept matters a lot. > > -- > Ray Brinzer
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Gavin Flower
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Michael Nolan
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Mladen Gogala
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Rob Sargent
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Martin Ritchie
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Rich Shepard
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Bèrto ëd Sèra
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Mladen Gogala
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Guyren Howe
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Raymond Brinzer
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Guyren Howe
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Mladen Gogala
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Peter J. Holzer
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Gavin Flower
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Mladen Gogala
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Peter J. Holzer
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Adrian Klaver
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Merlin Moncure
- Re: The tragedy of SQL David Goodenough
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Rob Sargent
- Re: The tragedy of SQL Merlin Moncure