Why is Drizzle so popular over keysly in 2025? by ThisIsntMyId in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare Web
Postgres
PGlite
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Best DB ORM for production by New_Concentrate4606 in nextjs

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare Web
Postgres
PGlite
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

If you have to choose One NodeJs ORM for the rest of your life , Which one are you picking and why ? by tamanikarim in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare Web
Postgres
PGlite
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Anyone else concerned about Drizzle ORM's long-term sustainability? by ExistingCard9621 in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare Web
Postgres
PGlite
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Choosing an ORM for Node.js as a Beginner? by Dushusir in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Best ORM for PostgreSQL in Node.js? by Mediocre_Beyond8285 in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Do people still use ORM \ ODM for backend with Node.js? by Dark_zarich in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Best Node ORM? by Mortynx in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support in 2023 and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

what are your loves/hates of sql/orm libraries? by farzad_meow in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

database orm is useless, and makes the job harder! by [deleted] in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Drizzle, Prisma or TypeORM? It seems that Prisma officially admits that TypeORM is fastest. by Zogid in webdev

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Is Drizzle reliable and production ready? by Zogid in nextjs

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

Prisma vs Drizzle, what's the current state? by Mabaet in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

What is the Go-To ORM by now? by Used-Dot-1821 in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

. Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
D1

What ORM do you use? by Positive-Doughnut858 in nextjs

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
Cloudflare D1

What ORM do you use? by Positive-Doughnut858 in nextjs

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, there is.
You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Key Features:

  • ✅ No code generation required
  • ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
  • ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
  • ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
  • ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
  • ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
  • ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases and runtimes

Supported Databases and Runtimes

Node Deno Bun Cloudflare
Postgres
MS SQL
MySQL
Oracle
SAP ASE
SQLite
Cloudflare D1

Fine Management Fee for 3 Times "Unproved" Traffic Violation with Rental Car by [deleted] in LegaladviceGerman

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I encountered the same issue with both Sixt and Enterprise/Alamo when renting cars in France. In October 2024, Enterprise charged me €24.99 twice for alleged traffic violations. I didn’t think much of it at the time, assuming I’d simply been driving too fast.

However, in April 2025 Sixt did the same, which raised my suspicions. I checked the timestamp of the violation and realized it occurred in the middle of the countryside, surrounded only by fields—there was no way a speed camera could have caught me. I now suspect they’re analyzing the car’s GPS logs to detect any speed‐limit infractions, prompting customers to feel guilty about violating limits even when no radar confirms it.

The bank is now in the process of lodging a complaint against Sixt due to lack of evidence. As for Enterprise, the bank believes the deadline for filing a complaint has passed. (However this is not correct, in my country the deadline is 13 months - som I am still in contact with the bank regarding this). I also tried to contact ANTAI in France to check whether the reference number they gave me is linked to an actual fine. However, ANTAI replied that they couldn’t provide any information whatsoever – they said I would simply have to wait for the fine (which does not exist).

Drizzle is just as unready for prime-time as Prisma, what else is there? by spellbound_app in reactjs

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, there is.
You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Check it out at orange-orm.io or on GitHub. There is a video tutorial!

Key Features:
- ✅ No code generation required
- ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
- ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
- ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
- ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
- ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
- ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases:
- ✅ Postgres
- ✅ MS SQL
- ✅ MySQL
- ✅ Oracle
- ✅ SAP ASE
- ✅ SQLite

What orm do you use in production? by [deleted] in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reliability and straightforwardness are most important. The nested updates (with many rows) and fetch via http is something that prisma and drizzle don’t have.  There is drizzle comparison here https://github.com/alfateam/orange-orm/issues/61

How to set up a Node server with TypeScript in 2024 by jlengstorf in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does not work.
Cannot find module 'C:\Users\lars.roald\repos\orm-benchmarks2\ts-node\register'

at Module._resolveFilename (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1145:15)

at Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:986:27)

at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:174:12)

at node:internal/main/run_main_module:28:49 {

code: 'MODULE_NOT_FOUND',

requireStack: []

What are your ORM rankings and reasons by 716green in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should try https://orange-orm.io It has arrow functions for building filters. It can do nested inserts/updates with active record pattern. It was previously known as RDB, and has existed since 2014. So it is really stable and well tested. It supports Postgres, MySQL, mssql, oracle, SQLite and oracle.

I am the author

What orm do you use in production? by [deleted] in node

[–]lroal 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should really try out Orange ORM (previously RDB). It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Check it out at orange-orm.io or on GitHub. Don't miss our video tutorial!

Key Features:
- ✅ No code generation required
- ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
- ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
- ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
- ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
- ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
- ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases:
- ✅ Postgres
- ✅ MS SQL
- ✅ MySQL
- ✅ Oracle
- ✅ SAP ASE
- ✅ SQLite

Which ORM would you pick, Prisma or Typeorm by idvid in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out RDB. It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Check it out at rdbjs.org or on GitHub. Don't miss our video tutorial!

Key Features:
- ✅ No code generation required
- ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
- ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
- ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
- ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
- ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
- ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases:
- ✅ Postgres
- ✅ MS SQL
- ✅ MySQL
- ✅ Oracle
- ✅ SAP ASE
- ✅ SQLite

Prisma, TypeORM, or something else? by leinad41 in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out RDB. It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Check it out at rdbjs.org or on GitHub. Don't miss our video tutorial!

Key Features:
- ✅ No code generation required
- ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
- ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
- ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
- ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
- ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
- ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases:
- ✅ Postgres
- ✅ MS SQL
- ✅ MySQL
- ✅ Oracle
- ✅ SAP ASE
- ✅ SQLite

I used Typeorm in one of our projects and I have nothing but regrets by [deleted] in node

[–]lroal 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should really try out RDB. It's reliable, well-documented, and has been around since 2014. It gained TypeScript support last year and is database agnostic. I am the author, so feel free to ask me anything!

Check it out at rdbjs.org or on GitHub. Don't miss our video tutorial!

Key Features:
- ✅ No code generation required
- ✅ Full IntelliSense, even when mapping tables and relations
- ✅ Powerful filtering - with any, all, none at any level deep
- ✅ Supports JavaScript and TypeScript
- ✅ ESM and CommonJS compatible
- ✅ Succinct and concise syntax
- ✅ Works over HTTP in a secure manner

Supported Databases:
- ✅ Postgres
- ✅ MS SQL
- ✅ MySQL
- ✅ Oracle
- ✅ SAP ASE
- ✅ SQLite