It's been stable, responsive, and mostly feature complete. I've only been using this for a couple of days for a project requiring me to do some renovation on a MySQL database backing a Symfony project. It's faster, it's got more features, and of course, it's free.
#Querious qfc pro
So while I'm going to be keeping an eye on Querious, I'll be using Sequel Pro going forward. And the CSV import works like a dream too. Not only that, I can type a SQL query, and edit the result set directly. Sequel Pro just wipes the floor with Querious in terms of performance. Or at least that's what I came to expect with Querious. Most of my database work is on hosted databases, so while my cable modem is pretty fast, I do always accept that it's not going to be super-responsive. Not only does it look great now, but it really flies. Well, I just couldn't believe what I was seeing. That's when I looked back up Sequel Pro which had spawned from CocoaMySQL.
#Querious qfc update
Without being able to add or edit rows to query results (still), and not wanting to type out INSERT or UPDATE statements, this was the only real way to manipulate the data, and with that out of the window I needed an alternative. The straw that broke the back for me was the last release with broke the ability to be able to add or edit rows in the content view (to be fair though this bug was fixed quickly). I have submitted bug reports numerous times, and to be fair occasionally I have had a reply - but not always. I can live with limitations if I know that stuff is coming, but it doesn't seem to be quick in coming. The thing is, it's beta software - I accept that - so it's going to be a bit lacking, but let's not forget it is not free beta software. It looks Mac-like, it does most of what I need to be able to do, and it was moving forward. So when Querious came along I was truly excited. CocoaMySQL was around then and wasn't too bad, but didn't have the feature set of Navicat, and then of course the development of it stopped. But it seems that for every beta release that comes along more problems turn up with it (this one seems to have broken the CSV import again).įor years I used Navicat, and for all it's flaws (the main one being it doesn't store passwords in the keychain), it worked and it was the best option around. It looks great, it has a good feature set, and the early adopter price is right, which is why I bought a licence some months back.
Blazing fast import and export (even faster than mysqldump!).
#Querious qfc full
Full support for views, triggers, functions, procedures, and events.So far we've added over 170 new features and improvements. Querious 2 is massive upgrade, throughly enhancing appearance, usability, features, performance, and everything in between. With Querious, you can even open up raw CSV or tab-delimited files and easily split, join, reorder, add, remove, and process columns and rows, and then convert the whole file to another format in a snap. Querious allows you to view, search, edit, import, export, build, configure, and monitor your MySQL and MariaDB databases easier than ever before.