At 12:28 AM 11/2/2005 -0500, Jan Wieck wrote:

Using REPLACE INTO at one place and creating duplicates on purpose in another seems to make zero sense to me. Until one can explain the reason for that to me, I claim that a UNIQUE constraint on such key is a logical consequence.

I believe it is better to tell people to use UNIQUE constraints to avoid duplicates than to tell them to use a particular stored procedure. I was just pointing out that the "magic" wasn't really in the stored procedure.

Especially since that particular stored procedure does not generalize easily - you have to change it to use it on another table. Users might make mistakes of using the procedure on a table without a uniqueness constraint in the right fields, or the wrong uniqueness constraint (e.g. different collation from the one they use in a select).

Whereas if they had a REPLACE/PUT/MERGE with similar syntax as an UPDATE, that is less likely to increase the possibility of errors.

Regards,
Link.



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