source-freshness-run-project-hooks to true (#11609)batch context object to model jinja context (#11025)--sample and --sample-window CLI params (#11299)dbt_project.yml (#11503)include/exclude terminology with warn-error-options (#11557)PartialSuccess to result in non-zero exit code (#11114)concurrent_batches config (#11122)--limit -1 properly in ShowTaskDirect so that it propagates None instead of a negative int (#None)pre-commit installation to Docker container for testing compatibility (#11498)CustomKeyInConfigDeprecation deprecation (#11576).freshness is equal to node's .config.freshness (#11717)Thanks to @jtcohen6 for writing this biography of Florence Earle Coates—a famous Philadelphian, and the namesake of this dbt Core release.
Florence Van Leer Earle Coates (1850-1927) was a widely published poet at the turn of the 20th century, who spent most of her life Philadelphia. Descended from and educated by prominent abolitionists, and mentored by English poet and social critic Matthew Arnold, she took as her poetical subjects nature, ancient Greece, and contemporary events (notably World War I). She also dedicated poems to other prominent authors and artists of her day.
In 1905, Coates published the poem “Helen Keller with a Rose,” after seeing a photograph of the author and disability rights activist that mesmerizes this modern viewer still:
Others may see thee; I behold thee not; Yet most I think thee, beauteous blossom, mine: For I, who walk in shade, like Proserpine— Things once too briefly looked on, long forgot— Seem by some tender miracle divine, When breathing thee, apart, To hold the rapturous summer warm within my heart.
We understand each other, thou and I! Thy velvet petals laid against my cheek, Thou feelest all the voiceless things I speak, And to my yearning makest mute reply: Yet a more special good of thee I seek, For God who made—oh, kind!— Beauty for one and all, gave fragrance for the blind!
.freshness is equal to node's .config.freshness (#11717)include/exclude terminology with warn-error-options (#11557)source-freshness-run-project-hooks to true (#11609)dbt_project.yml (#11503)pre-commit installation to Docker container for testing compatibility (#11498)CustomKeyInConfigDeprecation deprecation (#11576)batch context object to model jinja context (#11025)--sample and --sample-window CLI params (#11299)PartialSuccess to result in non-zero exit code (#11114)concurrent_batches config (#11122)--limit -1 properly in ShowTaskDirect so that it propagates None instead of a negative int (#None)PartialSuccess to result in non-zero exit code (#11114)concurrent_batches config (#11122)dbt show and dbt compile (#9840)order_by and limit fields to saved queries. (#10531)--resource-type and --exclude-resource-type CLI flags and environment variables for dbt test (#10656)retry support for microbatch models (#10715, #10729)full_refresh model config (#10785)--event-time-start is before --event-time-end (#10786)current_time value (#10819)event_time config (#10926)batch context object to model jinja context (#11025)merge_exclude_columns (#8267)unit_test config paths that are properly used (#10311)silence of warn_error_options via dbt_project.yaml flags (#10160)--resource-type test for dbt list and dbt build (#10730)--event-time-end is equivalent to the batch size truncated batch start time (#10824)lookback default from 0 to 1 to ensure better data completeness (#10867)--event-time-start and --event-time-end mutually required (#10874)end_time for batches to the ceiling to handle edge case where event_time column is a date (#10868)get_execution_status more broadly to better ensure run_results.json gets written (#10934)core/dbt/version.py (#10612)dbt/core/task/clean.py (#10616)TestSelector with ResourceTypeSelector (#10718)ResourceTypeSelector instances in dbt list and dbt build (#10739)Thanks to @QMalcolm for writing this biography of Dr. Susan La Flesche Picotte—a famous Philadelphian, and the namesake of this dbt Core release.
Dr. Susan La Flesche Picotte (1865 - 1915) of the Omaha tribe was a trailblazer to say the least. Dr. Susan, as her community called her, is most often remembered as being the first Native American woman to earn a medical degree. In 1886 she began attending the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania (now part of Drexel University), and in 1889 graduated as valedictorian of her class.
After graduating from WMCP, Dr. Susan La Flesche Picotte returned to the Omaha reservation where she dedicated her life to her community. Not only did she provide medical care, treating 1,300 patients over her career and building a hospital, but she often also acted as a lawyer, accountant, and political representative for her community. She advocated for temperance, improved hygiene, and combatting the spread of tuberculosis. She defended Omaha land interests, initially by writing letters the Commissioner of the Indian Office for others, and eventually traveling to Washington, D.C. to petition the Office of Indian Affairs for assistance. She is remembered for her unending dedication to the Omaha people.
batch context object to model jinja context (#11025)dbt show and dbt compile (#9840)get_execution_status more broadly to better ensure run_results.json gets written (#10934)