Are you actually claiming to have invented something? I can't see it.
And in general we are not impressed by "cool graphs". If we were
actually getting something useful, but I can't see that either as yet.
Eric
--
ms fnd in a lbry
we're supposed to be moderators of ourselves. don't you think our posts should be given to anyone interested? or you have to hide something? well, i have solution for these two problems: NO CROSSING, if you mind!
> > i'm honored to have something to share with anyone interested.
> > i sincerely fill that BRM could aim at SQL's place in programming.
>
> I would have thought that that was an apples/oranges comparison. Unless
> you are thinking about diagram-driven software, but that is an
> interesting concept not noted for its success except in very specific
> areas.
for now, i didn't see visual representation of BRM. as i thought, BRM existed before, but graphs are new. and if i'm allowed to have my opinion that's a very cool news. just to invite you to our little group, let me tease you a little bit:
https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1sa2AyprqIFvy2de3BoKse-4vfh2_sJq6DiRe4ZiXgu8/edit?hl=hr
what happens when things get ruff? let's see definition of the BRM in SQL visualization compared to the BRM in very itself:
https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1_jY_wLwqzuGMuff1-nOK8fgqcTY4GUQ2iENKfYEVC4k/edit?hl=hr
> > yes, it can manage n-ary relationships.
> >
> > is it new technology? i found some resources on internet claiming that BRM
> > exist since the year 1984. what is new is its graphing capabilities. to
> > give you a sneak peek, very BRM can be also implemented in itself.
>
> I found a 1982 paper which referred to a 1980 paper (it didn't take me
> long, or I wouldn't have bothered), as well as at least one quite recent
> paper (2009). I haven't read any more than the synopses, but they all
> seem to come from the large collection of people who do not properly
> understand the relational model.
>
> I'm afraid that, on the evidence so far, I have to put you in that
> category too.
>
> http://www.dbdebunk.com/page/page/1147347.htm
>
> > i hope i at least interested you. if i'm not, i'd like to thank you for
> > your time. that's the way to make a progress.
>
> Just for the interest of others, I will point out that you have had
> a very similar conversation with someone on comp.databases , and that
> you have this stuff on more than one website. So if you have a purpose
> other than getting yourself noticed and generating website traffic,
> the sooner it becomes more apparent the better.
>
> Eric
>
> --
> ms fnd in a lbry
as for those conversations, why didn't they take a place, that's up to you, folks. if anyone interested, "the code project site" (8 000 000 programmer members) actually this morning published an article i wrote on this subject:
http://www.codeproject.com/KB/database/brm001.aspx
if you can promise me that you really took this concept under consideration, and if you find it offensive for programmers community, i'll be glad to wipe up the group i'm trying to give a breath in. for xrist's sake, this is not about money and this is not a visit count pursuit. i actually think that we have something new we could use in database programming. and a friend doesn't deserve such humiliation i'm going through.
but again, maybe i'm living in imaginary clouds. so explain me it's so.
just, it took me so long to reach this stage of knowledge (in whatever infancy state it is). particularly, 15 years of thinking and thinking and thinking. you can imagine under what pressure i am for reaching so little in so much time.
Since I've got some experience about databases and SQL, one assumption constantly twinkled in my head: there has to be a better way for defining databases. I was imagining some cool and neat model for representing tables, records and relations that will simply "be the one". Since then I have experimented with different exotic visual representations of data that was crossing my mind. And then I saw it! It was literally love at first sight. The same power of SQL's database defining, but with much simpler rules. So simple that I decided to give it a name. The name was Binary Relational Modeling.
After setting up a dedicated site, I entered the same name in Google and realized that similar (if not the same) approaches already exist, even under the same name. After initial shock, when I gathered myself in, I found myself surprised why a wider use of the technology isn't already in a full swing by now. So I decided to share my experiences with programmers interested in alternative database technologies.
i hope You will forgive me for loosing temper, i was under great pressure. i'll try to be a good one from now on, i promise :x
Sorry, I don't have access to that. Actually, when I clicked on the link
from my newsreader it was just a bunch of garbled characters in pretty
pastel colors.
For a conversation to happen, you would have to say something. Anything
more substantive than: "Hey! Come on over to our new group! There'll be
ponies and ice cream and ..."
Now you seem to be re-inventing Mumps with a graphic interface. Not
relational at all then, which fits in because you don't seem to know
what a relation is.
And why "references to sets' elements" instead of just "sets'
elements" ?????????