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Nicolas Wavrant
ZODB
Commits
0711e67f
Commit
0711e67f
authored
Apr 20, 2010
by
Christian Theune
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Pull the overview onto the homepage to get some more meat right away.
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index.rst
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0711e67f
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@@ -4,10 +4,33 @@ ZODB - a native object database for Python
Don't squeeze your objects into tables: store them in an object database.
The Zope Object Database (ZODB) provides seamless object persistence in Python.
It gets rid of requiring a relational database for your object-oriented
application and provides you with a powerful and safe object store:
persistence, transactions, scalability, :doc:`and more<overview>`.
Overview
========
Python programs are written with the object-oriented paradigm. You use objects
that reference each other freely and can be of any form and shape: no object
has to adhere to a specific schema and can hold arbitrary information.
Storing those objects in relational databases requires you to give up on the
freedom of reference and schema. The constraints of the relational model
reduces your ability to write object-oriented code.
The ZODB is a native object database, that stores your objects while allowing
you to work with any paradigms that can be expressed in Python. Thereby your
code becomes simpler, more robust and easier to understand.
Also, there is no gap between the database and your program: no glue code to
write, no mappings to configure. Have a look at the tutorial to see, how easy
it is.
Some of the features that ZODB brings to you:
* Transparent persistence for Python objects
* Full ACID-compatible transaction support (including savepoints)
* History/undo ability
* Efficient support for binary large objects (BLOBs)
* Pluggable storages
* Scalable architecture
Documentation
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overview.rst
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93138ace
Overview
========
Python programs are written with the object-oriented paradigm. You use objects
that reference each other freely and can be of any form and shape: no object
has to adhere to a specific schema and can hold arbitrary information.
Storing those objects in relational databases requires you to give up on the
freedom of reference and schema. The constraints of the relational model
reduces your ability to write object-oriented code.
The ZODB is a native object database, that stores your objects while allowing
you to work with any paradigms that can be expressed in Python. Thereby your
code becomes simpler, more robust and easier to understand.
Also, there is no gap between the database and your program: no glue code to
write, no mappings to configure. Have a look at the tutorial to see, how easy
it is.
Some of the features that ZODB brings to you:
* Transparent persistence for Python objects
* Full ACID-compatible transaction support (including savepoints)
* History/undo ability
* Efficient support for binary large objects (BLOBs)
* Pluggable storages
* Scalable architecture
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