Seems like the reversal would be a logged event as well. 

I've always thought direct edits to any log by a user or even an admin corrupts 
the integrity of the log and invites unlogged edits to be made. Asking for 
trouble depending on the critical nature of the data changed. 

Paul H. Tarver



-----Original Message-----
From: ProfoxTech [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Frank 
Cazabon
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2019 4:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: How best to do an audit trail of changes (EASILY WITHOUT THE NEED 
FOR A DBA)

If your clients are anything like my clients, make sure you allow them access 
to change the historical dates after they've changed the price. Someone is 
bound to change the price at the wrong time and need to go back in and adjust 
it.



On 22 April 2019 15:33:48 GMT-04:00, "MB Software Solutions, LLC" 
<[email protected]> wrote:
>VFP9SP2 app, MariaDB 10 (MySQL) backend.
>
>One of my clients asked about a history of price changes.  Easy enough 
>to implement programmatically for the few price fields, but then I got 
>to wondering if simply putting code in the ON UPDATE trigger to send
>the 
>old record to a "history" table would be a more complete (and long term
>
>EASIER) solution, whereby my app would query the "history" table for 
>changes.
>
>Your thoughts for tracking price (or other) changes?
>
>tia,
>--Mike
>
>
>
>---
>This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
>https://www.avast.com/antivirus
>
>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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