
Thank you wholeheartedly to each one that reserved a bit of their time to make a contribution to this project. I can't express in words how proud and joyful I'm about my hard work and the thousands of people that helped me so far. This tool is the result of a dream of creating something really useful for the open-source community that I admire so much.
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The journey was really long, full of challenges that almost made me give up everything, but with the support from lots of people around the world, here we're, launching the long-awaited stable version of pgModeler 1.0.0! Since the early days of this project, seventeen years ago, I was anxious about this moment. There's more to be detailed, don't let to read the full blog post! Finally, this version introduces the backup utility plugin, which implements a simple, user-friendly interface for the commands pg_dump, pg_dumpall, pg_restore, and psql. In the SQL execution widget, when pasting SQL code coming from external IDEs, pgModeler will try to remove unneeded string concatenation characters in the clipboard text before inserting it in the input field. The SQL execution widget and data manipulation form now support data exporting to CSV format besides the classic plain text format. In general settings, the database object shadows can be deactivated improving the rendering speed. dbm files directly to the tool's main window to load models. One of them is the ability to drag & drop. Many other UI improvements were made attending to the users' requests. Also, pgModeler is now able to follow the system's color schema. The long-awaited code completion based on living database object names is now implemented in the tool.

After five months of development, the first alpha release for pgModeler 1.1.0 is finally ready and brings some significant improvements compared to 1.0.x.
