This reminds me something that happened to me about seven years ago. We had
a head honcho (read DBA manager) who just had a sweet slide from DB2 word to
Oracle and as one of the first things he suggested was to rename all the
tables to be prefixed by "USERTAB_" and all the views by "USERVIEW_", and
you got the idea. Naturally he also wanted all the apps to be recoded to
reflect the new tablenames (he had no idea what a synonym was or he just
didn't care). What was the point behind "USERTAB_" prefix? It's user created
tables, stupid, as opposed to system created ones!

"But you can't rename the system tables to prefix SYSTAB_.....", your truly
suggested.

"Sure you can", came the reponse growled back.

Everyone in the room smiled sheepishly. Realizing that he may have made a
blunder, Mr Name Prefixer roared at me:

"And you will make sure that it happens. that's your goal of this year - to
change the app and change the table names."

Mercifully, he didn't stick around longer. Pressure from within forced him
out to his familiar DB2 world. Perhaps he listened to his call from the
wild, the sweet sweet world where he can prefix whatever names to tables he
wants.

No, I didn't ask him what his cat's name was.

Arup

----- Original Message -----
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 2:08 PM


> Melissa,
>
> Ask him if he name all his tables "TAB...", java class "Java...",
> his pet "CAT..." or "DOG..." etc?
>
> Richard
>
> -----Original Message-----
> Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 1:44 PM
> To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
>
>
> there is no reason to call the database "ora....."
>
> I understand the reasoning behind and the desire for naming
> conventions.
>
> What happens when your shop decides to go with MySQL (as this list has
> been talking about)... will he want to rename the database to
> mysqlt24x7?  will he even be allowed to have a database name that long?
>
>
>
> --- "Godlewski, Melissa" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > List,
> >
> > I'm use to using a standard D=development T=test P=production.  So
> > for a
> > database newly created on development it would be called something
> > like
> > D24X7.  Then when it was created on Production it would be called
> > P24X7.  Or
> > along similar lines.
> >
> > I'm working with an other DBA who wants everything to start with ora.
> > Therefore it would be called orad24x7 and orap24x7.  I've argued the
> > ora is
> > rather redundant since everyone will know it's an Oracle database
> > they are
> > connecting to.  He is adamant it should have the ora identification
> > so it is
> > easily identified.  I feel it will cause more confusion having ora at
> > the
> > beging of every dbname.
> >
> > Any thoughts for against either position?
> >
> > TIA
> > M.Godlewski
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
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