SQL database hosting for study [closed]
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I am now beginning to learn SQL and am looking for a free or very cheap service in which I can host small databases and execute commands for learning purposes. Also, I want to start learning to manipulate SQL data directly in R. Does anyone know of a service like this?
sql r web-services
closed as off-topic by Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham Nov 10 at 17:19
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it." – Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham
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I am now beginning to learn SQL and am looking for a free or very cheap service in which I can host small databases and execute commands for learning purposes. Also, I want to start learning to manipulate SQL data directly in R. Does anyone know of a service like this?
sql r web-services
closed as off-topic by Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham Nov 10 at 17:19
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it." – Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham
1
Try running them locally? Probably not the answer you wanted to hear, but perhaps doing things this way could provide for a better learning experience. Consider just grabbing a tabular dataset from somewhere like Kaggle, design an SQL schema for it, and then just store and query it locally
– 12b345b6b78
Nov 10 at 15:58
Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure have free tiers for one year. But, as @12b345b6b78 noted, it's super possible to run databases on your workstation regardless of platform.
– hrbrmstr
Nov 10 at 15:58
1
The RSQLite package on CRAN may be the easiest way to start studying SQL from R locally. The vignette should help you decide if it is suitable for your requirements.
– makeyourownmaker
Nov 10 at 16:25
The sqldf package is good for learning SQL. You don't have to set up a database at all but can just run SQL statements immediately using data frames as the tables so you can start playing around with SQL immediately.
– G. Grothendieck
Nov 10 at 17:22
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I am now beginning to learn SQL and am looking for a free or very cheap service in which I can host small databases and execute commands for learning purposes. Also, I want to start learning to manipulate SQL data directly in R. Does anyone know of a service like this?
sql r web-services
I am now beginning to learn SQL and am looking for a free or very cheap service in which I can host small databases and execute commands for learning purposes. Also, I want to start learning to manipulate SQL data directly in R. Does anyone know of a service like this?
sql r web-services
sql r web-services
asked Nov 10 at 15:56
Roland
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1249
closed as off-topic by Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham Nov 10 at 17:19
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it." – Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham
closed as off-topic by Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham Nov 10 at 17:19
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it." – Gordon Linoff, camille, pirho, EdChum, Graham
1
Try running them locally? Probably not the answer you wanted to hear, but perhaps doing things this way could provide for a better learning experience. Consider just grabbing a tabular dataset from somewhere like Kaggle, design an SQL schema for it, and then just store and query it locally
– 12b345b6b78
Nov 10 at 15:58
Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure have free tiers for one year. But, as @12b345b6b78 noted, it's super possible to run databases on your workstation regardless of platform.
– hrbrmstr
Nov 10 at 15:58
1
The RSQLite package on CRAN may be the easiest way to start studying SQL from R locally. The vignette should help you decide if it is suitable for your requirements.
– makeyourownmaker
Nov 10 at 16:25
The sqldf package is good for learning SQL. You don't have to set up a database at all but can just run SQL statements immediately using data frames as the tables so you can start playing around with SQL immediately.
– G. Grothendieck
Nov 10 at 17:22
add a comment |
1
Try running them locally? Probably not the answer you wanted to hear, but perhaps doing things this way could provide for a better learning experience. Consider just grabbing a tabular dataset from somewhere like Kaggle, design an SQL schema for it, and then just store and query it locally
– 12b345b6b78
Nov 10 at 15:58
Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure have free tiers for one year. But, as @12b345b6b78 noted, it's super possible to run databases on your workstation regardless of platform.
– hrbrmstr
Nov 10 at 15:58
1
The RSQLite package on CRAN may be the easiest way to start studying SQL from R locally. The vignette should help you decide if it is suitable for your requirements.
– makeyourownmaker
Nov 10 at 16:25
The sqldf package is good for learning SQL. You don't have to set up a database at all but can just run SQL statements immediately using data frames as the tables so you can start playing around with SQL immediately.
– G. Grothendieck
Nov 10 at 17:22
1
1
Try running them locally? Probably not the answer you wanted to hear, but perhaps doing things this way could provide for a better learning experience. Consider just grabbing a tabular dataset from somewhere like Kaggle, design an SQL schema for it, and then just store and query it locally
– 12b345b6b78
Nov 10 at 15:58
Try running them locally? Probably not the answer you wanted to hear, but perhaps doing things this way could provide for a better learning experience. Consider just grabbing a tabular dataset from somewhere like Kaggle, design an SQL schema for it, and then just store and query it locally
– 12b345b6b78
Nov 10 at 15:58
Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure have free tiers for one year. But, as @12b345b6b78 noted, it's super possible to run databases on your workstation regardless of platform.
– hrbrmstr
Nov 10 at 15:58
Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure have free tiers for one year. But, as @12b345b6b78 noted, it's super possible to run databases on your workstation regardless of platform.
– hrbrmstr
Nov 10 at 15:58
1
1
The RSQLite package on CRAN may be the easiest way to start studying SQL from R locally. The vignette should help you decide if it is suitable for your requirements.
– makeyourownmaker
Nov 10 at 16:25
The RSQLite package on CRAN may be the easiest way to start studying SQL from R locally. The vignette should help you decide if it is suitable for your requirements.
– makeyourownmaker
Nov 10 at 16:25
The sqldf package is good for learning SQL. You don't have to set up a database at all but can just run SQL statements immediately using data frames as the tables so you can start playing around with SQL immediately.
– G. Grothendieck
Nov 10 at 17:22
The sqldf package is good for learning SQL. You don't have to set up a database at all but can just run SQL statements immediately using data frames as the tables so you can start playing around with SQL immediately.
– G. Grothendieck
Nov 10 at 17:22
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Try running them locally? Probably not the answer you wanted to hear, but perhaps doing things this way could provide for a better learning experience. Consider just grabbing a tabular dataset from somewhere like Kaggle, design an SQL schema for it, and then just store and query it locally
– 12b345b6b78
Nov 10 at 15:58
Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure have free tiers for one year. But, as @12b345b6b78 noted, it's super possible to run databases on your workstation regardless of platform.
– hrbrmstr
Nov 10 at 15:58
1
The RSQLite package on CRAN may be the easiest way to start studying SQL from R locally. The vignette should help you decide if it is suitable for your requirements.
– makeyourownmaker
Nov 10 at 16:25
The sqldf package is good for learning SQL. You don't have to set up a database at all but can just run SQL statements immediately using data frames as the tables so you can start playing around with SQL immediately.
– G. Grothendieck
Nov 10 at 17:22