What are data formats you like /g/?
>sqlite
>csv
>json is okayish
>berkeley db
json
bencode
rencode
csv
ini
binary
mongodb
json
tiff
sqlite if it had password protection by default
xml
http://msgpack.org/index.html
>>54960746
binary is not a data format
Plaintext is king.
>>54960699
png
ppt
doc
mp3
yaml
>>54961249
>binary is not a data format
>>54960699
sexpr
sexpr.gz
>>54961322
Binary is indeed not a data format
>>54961322
It practically isn't. You aren't gonna store your data in a single number.
>>54961351
Shit-kid, come on.
>>54961441
I appreciate you adapting the image for us southern-hemisphere readers, thank you. Unfortunately, that doesn't make you any less wrong. Were it for your point of view, even the plainest plaintext would be only a binary representation of ASCII.
>>54960699
Protocol buffers. All day, every day.
>>54961353
>you aren't gonna store your data in a single number
Watch me.
>>54960699
JSON for data interchange. I also use the native JSON data types in PostgreSQL when I need some unstructured data up in that grill.
SQLite3 because it's written by the codes. Fast, efficient, and can be opened by multiple processes at the same time. I often use it as intermediate storage.
CSV because some of the programs I use export in and out of it a lot.
Never had a use for key-value storage yet, except maybe Memcached - but that's for webapps.