Postico has a powerful graphical structure editor for creating and altering tables.Īdd a column, edit data types, set a default value.Ĭolumns, indexes and constraints are unified in a single editor, so you see everything at once.Īnd the more technically inclined can view the structure as raw SQL (DDL view). Powerful features like the foreign key picker or the row detail sidebar make editing all kinds of tables a breeze. Auto-format SQL queries with Ctrl-F: pgFormatter is now built in!Ĭlick a table in the sidebar, and see the data instantly.Edit SQL files with other text editors like VS Code, Atom, Sublime, Textmate, ….Drag any SQL file into the sidebar to add it to Postico.Postico autosaves changes so you never lose your work.Open the same file in multiple tabs or windows.Create multiple SQL files and organize them into folders.The new SQL query editor makes working with a lot of queries easier than ever: If you'd like to know more about Postico 1.5, click here. Postico 2 is the next major version coming after Postico 1.5. Whether you want to enter data, search data, or perform SQL queries, Postico has you covered. Our customers range from researchers and analysts to app developers and students. Postico 2 is a database app with a very strong focus on its core audience: people who use databases. While Postico 2 is our latest and greatest version of Postico (see whats new in the changelog), we continue to support Postico 1.5. If you have an older Mac, we also have old versions of Postico available. Schroer Temples of Song in Silius Italicus Alison Keith Romuleos superabit voce nepotes: Remembering Romulus in Silius Italicus Claire Stocks Hannibal Redivivus: Fear and Haunting Memory in Silius Italicus Angeliki N.Postico 2 is compatible with PostgreSQL 8.0 or later, Amazon Redshift, CockroachDB, Greenplum, and others. Bernstein Part 3 Historical Challenges to ‘National’ Epic Silius Italicus as an Interpreter of Virgil: Dido and Anna Sergio Casali Pompey and Aemilius Paulus, or the Epic Genre between Lucan and Silius Italicus Nicola Lanzarone From the Rubicon to the Alps: Re-reading Eumolpus’ Caesar in Light of Silius Italicus’ Hannibal Stefano Poletti Part 4 Viewing Roman History (and Literature) from the Inside Scaevola’s aristeia: A Complementary Reworking of a Historical Source and the Epic Tradition Filippo Fabbri Exul in orbe toto, or, How to Map Future Power in Silius Italicus Clayton A. Roumpou, Clayton Schroer, Claire Stocks.Ībbreviations Notes on Contributors Introduction: Silius Italicus and the Tradition of the Roman Historical Epos Antony Augoustakis and Marco Fucecchi Part 1 The Historical Epic Tradition Silius Italicus and the Conventions of Historical Epic at Rome Gesine Manuwald Silius Italicus between Epos and Historiography Paolo Esposito Part 2 Rethinking Roman ‘Mythical History’ Silius Ciceronianus: Regulus as a Reflection of Cicero in Punica 6 Thomas Baier Silius Italicus and Ovid’s Roman History Raymond Marks Claudian’s Silius Neil W. Bernstein, Sergio Casali, Paolo Esposito, Filippo Fabbri, Alison Keith, Nicola Lanzarone, Gesine Manuwald, Raymond Marks, Stefano Poletti, Angeliki N. He is the author of some monographs on Flavian epic poems (Valerius Flaccus’ Argonautica and Silius’ Punica) as well as many articles on various topics in Latin literature.Ĭontributors are Thomas Baier, Neil W. His research interests include Latin literature from the Augustan age to the Ist century CE, with particular regard to epic poetry. Marco Fucecchi is Associate professor of Latin language and literature at the University of Udine (Italy). He is the author of many monographs and edited volumes on various topics in classical literature. His research interests include Latin imperial epic, Roman comedy and historiography, women in antiquity, classical reception, and gender theory. Antony Augoustakis is Professor of Classics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in Urbana, Illinois, US.
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