This one time, at band camp, Thomas Yip said:
TY >No
TY >>
TY >>Is it possible to map two classes to one table.
TY >>( i.e. Super and the Sub Class )
Thomas,
I thought that it was possible to map more than one class to one
table.
Say you've got a 30 column table that was originally designed by a
DBA as a catch-all table (for whatever reason). Now I am working
on a project and all the data I need for this phase of the project
is located in that 30 column table. Logically, this data can be
broken out into five or six top level classes. Is it not possible
at all the map these classes to this one table?
I seem to remember reading something or speaking with Oleg about
this very thing and it being possible. The reason I'm asking is
that I don't have the time to test this myself right now so I figured
I'd just ask a quick question.
Thanks!
Bruce
--
perl -e 'print unpack("u30","<0G)U8V4\@4VYY9&5R\"F9E<G)E=\$\!F<FEI+F-O;0\`\`");'
-----------------------------------------------------------
If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing, send mail to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of:
unsubscribe castor-dev