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4 rows where author_association = "NONE" and "updated_at" is on date 2022-11-14 sorted by updated_at descending

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user 4

  • lucapette 1
  • virtadpt 1
  • sachaj 1
  • eigenfoo 1

issue 1

  • Call for birthday presents: if you're using Datasette, let us know how you're using it here 4

author_association 1

  • NONE · 4 ✖
id html_url issue_url node_id user created_at updated_at ▲ author_association body reactions issue performed_via_github_app
1314455003 https://github.com/simonw/datasette/issues/1886#issuecomment-1314455003 https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/datasette/issues/1886 IC_kwDOBm6k_c5OWP3b sachaj 17053189 2022-11-14T21:51:11Z 2022-11-14T21:51:11Z NONE

Happy Birthday Datasette!

I am a librarian at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) and I've been using Datasette to publish excerpts of our library data. There are several use cases I'm working with as a proof of concept : 1. New titles list : based on reports of recent acquisitions by subject, discipline, etc. 2. List of all UQAM theses and dissertations : based on an extract of bibliographic records 3. List of all publications by UQAM Authors : based on an extract of bibliographic records

See our prototype under construction here : https://datasette-bib.uqam.ca/ (some bits and pieces have been translated into French)

Datasette is amazing, there is so much potential here for libraries. Thanks to Simon and all the contributors for this outstanding effort. Also sqlite-utils deserves special mention as incredibly handy and useful.

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Call for birthday presents: if you're using Datasette, let us know how you're using it here 1447050738  
1314223118 https://github.com/simonw/datasette/issues/1886#issuecomment-1314223118 https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/datasette/issues/1886 IC_kwDOBm6k_c5OVXQO virtadpt 639730 2022-11-14T18:51:20Z 2022-11-14T18:51:20Z NONE

I use Datasette to analyze blocklists by using csv-to-sqlite to pull their contents into a database and Datasette to look around through them. I also use its REST API to query said database as part of filtering out garbage from domains found in those blocklists.

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Call for birthday presents: if you're using Datasette, let us know how you're using it here 1447050738  
1313271719 https://github.com/simonw/datasette/issues/1886#issuecomment-1313271719 https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/datasette/issues/1886 IC_kwDOBm6k_c5ORu-n lucapette 124274 2022-11-14T08:25:12Z 2022-11-14T08:25:12Z NONE

Nothing spectacular yet but I think this falls under "cool/cute application of datasette": improving fakedata performance for fun. tl;dr I used datasette to visualize benchmarking data.

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Call for birthday presents: if you're using Datasette, let us know how you're using it here 1447050738  
1312898318 https://github.com/simonw/datasette/issues/1886#issuecomment-1312898318 https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/datasette/issues/1886 IC_kwDOBm6k_c5OQT0O eigenfoo 19851673 2022-11-14T00:52:16Z 2022-11-14T00:52:16Z NONE

I'm a cryptic crossword enthusiast and have spent a lot of time scraping and parsing cryptic crossword clues from various blogs, forums and publications. The result is over half a million clues from cryptic crosswords over the past twelve years, including the clue, answer, puzzle date, puzzle name and a link to the original source. This is all hosted using Datasette, which has been a delight to use: https://cryptics.georgeho.org/

This dataset is a significant work of crossword archivism and scholarship, as acquiring historical crosswords and structuring their contents require focused effort and tedious cleaning that few are willing to do for such trivial data - for example, according to this 2004 selection guide, the Library of Congress explicitly does not collect crossword puzzles. Anecdotally, I know that many constructors/setters of cryptic crosswords use this dataset as a resource, and some even simply call it "the database" - this is probably one of the most impactful data projects I've worked on!

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Call for birthday presents: if you're using Datasette, let us know how you're using it here 1447050738  

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