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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion docs/standard/data/sqlite/compare.md
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Expand Up @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ In 2005, Robert Simpson created System.Data.SQLite, a SQLite provider for ADO.NE

The first version of .NET Core (released in 2016) was a single, lightweight, modern, and cross-platform implementation of .NET. Obsolete APIs and APIs with more modern alternatives were intentionally removed. ADO.NET didn't include any of the DataSet APIs (including DataTable and DataAdapter).

The Entity Framework team was somewhat familiar with the System.Data.SQLite codebase. Brice Lambson, a member of the EF team, had previously helped the SQLite team add support for Entity Framework versions 5 and 6. Brice was also experimenting with his own implementation of a SQLite ADO.NET provider around the same time that .NET Core was being planned. After a long discussion, the Entity Framework team decided to create Microsoft.Data.Sqlite based on Brice's prototype. This would allow them to create a new lightweight and modern implementation that would align with the goals of .NET Core.
The Entity Framework team was somewhat familiar with the System.Data.SQLite codebase. Brice Lambson, a former member of the EF team, had previously helped the SQLite team add support for Entity Framework versions 5 and 6. Brice was also experimenting with his own implementation of a SQLite ADO.NET provider around the same time that .NET Core was being planned. After a long discussion, the Entity Framework team decided to create Microsoft.Data.Sqlite based on Brice's prototype. This would allow them to create a new lightweight and modern implementation that would align with the goals of .NET Core.

As an example of what we mean by more modern, here is code to create a [user-defined function](user-defined-functions.md) in both System.Data.SQLite and Microsoft.Data.Sqlite.

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