Congrats on launching, but this feels like an uphill climb to get paying customers. You need to find the intersection of potential customers that know SQL but don't want to use one of the open source options. (perhaps data analysts working in restricted environments where the only option is a web browser)
this is a tarpit idea I've fallen into multiple times. It's really hard to make money from a desktop SQL client, let alone now that DuckDB has a good, free UI.
As OSX user... if there is a nice pristine OSX app (like Postico) I will pay for it even if theres a free version (easily, hands down) if the UI/UX is nice, and pro version has extra features. So I'm definitely someone who would pay.
You might have a wider audience if you put in on the app store. I only install very well-known software outside of the app store. For anything more niche, I need it to be on the app store to offer some assurance that it is not malicious and that sandboxing is enforced.
Congratulations. I do see value in quickly seeing, querying files in a nice desktop interface. I am curious why there is no parquet support though. If duckdb is running in the background it is probably easy to support it?
parquet support would be pretty easy I think, but also way outside the target market user. These are the features that are really hard to avoid: easy, but not free, no benefit.
A few hours ago this would have been useful, I will probably give it a try in few days.
On another note, I recommend clarifying in the heroes page that it's about a one-time purchase, because that's a really big plus.
Quick question - is it possible to import multiple files at once? I frequently get ZIP files full of csv/xlsx files that I need to search through. I didn't see a way to import more than 1 file at a time. Thanks!
You may want to try something similar to Python Polars scan_csv for lazy evaluation of same schema csv directories. It also supports a SQL context where you can use a subset of Ansi Sql instead of learning the functional api to start.
I think I'm your target user, but I currently use DuckDB for this type of work, so unlikely to buy your product. That said, lots of devs pay for Rider and/or DataGrip - sometimes with their own money - so maybe there is a market here?
What about a directory with similar CSV files - I have a use case where similar structure CSV, 2 TB data broken into 700 files. Instead of 1 large file. Would that work?
For a lot of files where you would want to perform a quick one-time analysis, I don't think it's worth starting up a new database, and write scripts that parse the file from the source format and import it into the database. The one time I did it for postgres it took me maybe 2-4 hours to finish the script and start looking at the data. Next time it would be maybe an hour, but it's still a time.
So I guess I can see how not having to do the conversion for quick one-time analysis could be beneficial.
Is it just me, or the images on the website aren't loading? Using firefox, from what I searched it seems like it could be just a firefox issue. The cdn links are https bt when navigating there manually it says the connection is not private.
Author here. It uses DuckDB under the hood, which is a fantastic piece of software.
Yes, even DuckDB has UI now, but I didn't find it to my taste. There's no table view, filters are a bit weird, and not exactly keyboard accessible. TextQuery also has Visualize feature to quickly create charts and tabs to run things in parallel. Again, it's personal preference, but there are advantages in being a desktop-first app.
IIRC, SQLlite requires you to define a schema first, which can be a bit tedious. DuckDB is actually a better tool for this in every regard, since it can parse CSV files quite well. The latest version includes support for XLSX as well.
My personal take is, yes, it's possible in multiple other ways, but I just like having a well-designed GUI app do it for me. Just how TablePlus does for Database Management.
> I just like having a well-designed GUI app do it for me.
MSSQL/SSMS supports this with some fancy techniques.
> This wizard was created to improve the current import experience leveraging an intelligent framework known as Program Synthesis using Examples (PROSE). For a user without specialized domain knowledge, importing data can often be a complex, error prone, and tedious task. This wizard streamlines the import process as simple as selecting an input file and unique table name, and the PROSE framework handles the rest.
> PROSE analyzes data patterns in your input file to infer column names, types, delimiters, and more. This framework learns the structure of the file and does all of the hard work so users don't have to.
Readers may also enjoy Steampipe [1], an open source tool to live query 140+ services with SQL (e.g. AWS, GitHub, CSV, Kubernetes, etc). It uses Postgres Foreign Data Wrappers under the hood and supports joins etc with other tables. (Disclaimer - I'm a lead on the project.)
Your tool has been awesome! Seeing what it can do inspired me to write a POC that connected to an enterprise IBM application that I used to implement: https://github.com/karbasia/tririga-data-workbench (also uses DuckDB and Perspective with some additional hacks to make it work with IBM's tool).
> The license entitles you to receive lifetime updates for the major version. When we release the next major version, you can optionally renew the license.
Fairly common. JetBrains started that way too. Will they one day have a major version that's using a subscription model? Perhaps. But they will likely not regret this too much.
Insert some convoluted argument about new versions being "new versions" and not updates, so one is not entitled to them ;-) , just like politicians argue things like genocide not being genocide.
I hate the subscription model but I do recognize if they continously update the software, they'd like to get paid to do so.
I don't know. We had a pretty well established model that included free updates, but required a new purchase for a new major version down the line. I think that worked pretty well.
Congrats on launching, but this feels like an uphill climb to get paying customers. You need to find the intersection of potential customers that know SQL but don't want to use one of the open source options. (perhaps data analysts working in restricted environments where the only option is a web browser)
this is a tarpit idea I've fallen into multiple times. It's really hard to make money from a desktop SQL client, let alone now that DuckDB has a good, free UI.
Can you use that with for instance a postgres server? I thought it would only work with DuckDB (sqlite?) databases.
Yes, DuckDB has a postgres extension which works via libpq.
Other extensions include but aren't limited to: MySQL, AWS, Azure, Excel, Iceberg, JSON
https://duckdb.org/docs/stable/extensions/postgres.html
As OSX user... if there is a nice pristine OSX app (like Postico) I will pay for it even if theres a free version (easily, hands down) if the UI/UX is nice, and pro version has extra features. So I'm definitely someone who would pay.
You might have a wider audience if you put in on the app store. I only install very well-known software outside of the app store. For anything more niche, I need it to be on the app store to offer some assurance that it is not malicious and that sandboxing is enforced.
Congratulations. I do see value in quickly seeing, querying files in a nice desktop interface. I am curious why there is no parquet support though. If duckdb is running in the background it is probably easy to support it?
parquet support would be pretty easy I think, but also way outside the target market user. These are the features that are really hard to avoid: easy, but not free, no benefit.
Coongrats on the release.
It reminds me of Log Parser Studio [1] on Windows. Using SQL to query text and log files is a great idea.
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20170710212920/http://gallery.te...
A few hours ago this would have been useful, I will probably give it a try in few days. On another note, I recommend clarifying in the heroes page that it's about a one-time purchase, because that's a really big plus.
Quick question - is it possible to import multiple files at once? I frequently get ZIP files full of csv/xlsx files that I need to search through. I didn't see a way to import more than 1 file at a time. Thanks!
You may want to try something similar to Python Polars scan_csv for lazy evaluation of same schema csv directories. It also supports a SQL context where you can use a subset of Ansi Sql instead of learning the functional api to start.
This does seem pretty neat. Any plans to expand to include XML as well?
I think I'm your target user, but I currently use DuckDB for this type of work, so unlikely to buy your product. That said, lots of devs pay for Rider and/or DataGrip - sometimes with their own money - so maybe there is a market here?
I could use this.
Questions: What file sizes have you tested?
What about a directory with similar CSV files - I have a use case where similar structure CSV, 2 TB data broken into 700 files. Instead of 1 large file. Would that work?
oh man, I remebmer solving this problem by connecting these files into SQL SERVER and joining agains them. Those were the days
I think someone who's willing to use SQL will also be willing to convert such files into, well, proper DB.
For a lot of files where you would want to perform a quick one-time analysis, I don't think it's worth starting up a new database, and write scripts that parse the file from the source format and import it into the database. The one time I did it for postgres it took me maybe 2-4 hours to finish the script and start looking at the data. Next time it would be maybe an hour, but it's still a time.
So I guess I can see how not having to do the conversion for quick one-time analysis could be beneficial.
Is it just me, or the images on the website aren't loading? Using firefox, from what I searched it seems like it could be just a firefox issue. The cdn links are https bt when navigating there manually it says the connection is not private.
Pricing is too weird.
Feels like `clickhouse local` or `duckdb` with a price tag. Especially since duckdb even has a nice UI now.
Author here. It uses DuckDB under the hood, which is a fantastic piece of software.
Yes, even DuckDB has UI now, but I didn't find it to my taste. There's no table view, filters are a bit weird, and not exactly keyboard accessible. TextQuery also has Visualize feature to quickly create charts and tabs to run things in parallel. Again, it's personal preference, but there are advantages in being a desktop-first app.
For CSV files you can also import them directly into a SQLite file using https://sqlitebrowser.org/
XLSX would be the same workflow with "save as" CSV and then push it into SQLite.
IIRC, SQLlite requires you to define a schema first, which can be a bit tedious. DuckDB is actually a better tool for this in every regard, since it can parse CSV files quite well. The latest version includes support for XLSX as well.
My personal take is, yes, it's possible in multiple other ways, but I just like having a well-designed GUI app do it for me. Just how TablePlus does for Database Management.
> I just like having a well-designed GUI app do it for me.
MSSQL/SSMS supports this with some fancy techniques.
> This wizard was created to improve the current import experience leveraging an intelligent framework known as Program Synthesis using Examples (PROSE). For a user without specialized domain knowledge, importing data can often be a complex, error prone, and tedious task. This wizard streamlines the import process as simple as selecting an input file and unique table name, and the PROSE framework handles the rest.
> PROSE analyzes data patterns in your input file to infer column names, types, delimiters, and more. This framework learns the structure of the file and does all of the hard work so users don't have to.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/relational-databases/i...
You can import CSV files into sqlite without a schema, and you can turn of the ability to auto guess a columns data type if needed.
Readers may also enjoy Steampipe [1], an open source tool to live query 140+ services with SQL (e.g. AWS, GitHub, CSV, Kubernetes, etc). It uses Postgres Foreign Data Wrappers under the hood and supports joins etc with other tables. (Disclaimer - I'm a lead on the project.)
1 - https://github.com/turbot/steampipe
To be completely honest I tend to use either powershell or Nushell to query these sorts of files. I do also use sqlite as well when needed.
does that also work with xlsx files without much pain?
Nushell has it built in: https://www.nushell.sh/commands/docs/from_xlsx.html
Powershell can query excel files in various ways and there's a module for native powershell excel work: https://www.powershellgallery.com/packages/ImportExcel/5.4.2
Fascinating, is there something like this for Word?
Morning built-in I know of. There's COM or pandoc, but you'd need to script that yourself.
That's great. Is there something like this for MS Paint?
Try https://sql-workbench.com if you‘d like to do this directly in the browser, for free. Including Parquet and Arrow support as well.
Your tool has been awesome! Seeing what it can do inspired me to write a POC that connected to an enterprise IBM application that I used to implement: https://github.com/karbasia/tririga-data-workbench (also uses DuckDB and Perspective with some additional hacks to make it work with IBM's tool).
There’s also https://github.com/spiceai/spiceai
>Pay Once, Use Forever ... Free updates
I suspect the vendor is going to regret that, further down the line.
> The license entitles you to receive lifetime updates for the major version. When we release the next major version, you can optionally renew the license.
Fairly common. JetBrains started that way too. Will they one day have a major version that's using a subscription model? Perhaps. But they will likely not regret this too much.
>The license entitles you to receive lifetime updates for the major version.
Where does it say that?
That is common and it is the model I use for my own software. But that isn't what I understood from their website.
Home page: "Pay Once, Use Forever. We hate needless subscriptions as much as you do. TextQuery comes with a perpetual license with free updates."
Pricing page: "Perpetual license Lifetime updates"
Which strongly implies every update is free, forever.
Ok, it says that further down the pricing page. I don't see how that fits with "Perpetual license Lifetime updates". It feels deceptive.
Insert some convoluted argument about new versions being "new versions" and not updates, so one is not entitled to them ;-) , just like politicians argue things like genocide not being genocide.
I hate the subscription model but I do recognize if they continously update the software, they'd like to get paid to do so.
It's the first question/answer in the FAQ.
No worries. They will just break their promise, just like most companies that claimed something similar.
I actually have some apps still which I bought for life years back but doesn't offer that anymore. For instance blink shell for iOS devices.
I don't know. We had a pretty well established model that included free updates, but required a new purchase for a new major version down the line. I think that worked pretty well.