Comment by andersonklando

Comment by andersonklando 2 days ago

4 replies

We do at my team. I do not work on the Backend side, but I help in designing the DB schema.

Whenever I am thinking of new features to be developed, or when engineers are suggesting some features/approaches, looking at the ERD helps a ton. Onboarding is also easier.

We were using Lucidchart[1] until we reached the limit[2], so we found dbdiagram.io (which is just not the same).

[1] So far, it was the best of the market in terms of "canvas freedom" [2] We are struggling with salaries, so we are saving everywhere

reactordev 2 days ago

how many tables? is it manageable and interesting like trying to squeeze 2b records into postgres or what?

Also lucidchart is just draw.io fyi - you don't need a license unless you need the file sharing aspect and I feel like it belongs closer to the code.

I'm just generally curious what others' process is for this as the only meetings I've had in the last 5 years were who was getting cut.

  • andersonklando 2 days ago

    If I recall, Lucidchart allows up to 15 "shapes.

    > Also, Lucidchart is just draw.io fyi - you don't need a license unless you need the file sharing aspect, and I feel like it belongs closer to the code.

    No, it is not. I took the whole day to check what is available in the market, and concluded that Lucidchart UX is quite balanced.

    • reactordev 2 days ago

      well, they used to be - I just went and saw they sprinkled llms into it so yeah, now it's different. Diagrams.net aka Draw.io was what they were using...

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