I heard of it done on non-java projects. Steve Feuerstein (O'Reilly author)
is/was pretty big on it if I remember. What is does is provide consistent
access to your SQL. When you consider the way the cost based optimizer
works
and the fact that the slightest difference in spacing or whatever in a SQL
statement
will not allow reuse, not to mention all those developers who code their own
way, some using bind variables and some not, it actually seems quite
beneficial.
That being said, I have never done it. The closest I have come is making
developers
remove the half a million identical statements from their stored code and
making
a procedure out of it.
-----Original Message-----
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2002 5:25 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
I've seen this done also on a Java project. My understanding was that it
had to do more with the way an object oriented programmer's mind worked
than with any code efficiency.
"Grabowy,
Chris" To: Multiple recipients of list
ORACLE-L
<cgrabowy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
@fcg.com> cc:
Sent by: root Subject: Using procedures
instead of coding
update/insert SQL...huh?
01/14/2002
10:10 AM
Please
respond to
ORACLE-L
I just joined a new Oracle/Java project using Tomcat app server. On this
project they decided to create an update procedure and insert procedure for
every table. This procedure is then called in the Java code with the
appropriate parameters passed, instead of simply coding the UPDATE or
INSERT
SQL directly in Java.
Does anyone else take this approach? I'm trying to understand the pros vs
cons of this approach.
TIA!!!
Chris
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