On Mon, Aug 22, 2011 at 8:57 PM, keyd...@gmx.de <keyd...@gmx.de> wrote:
> , I start to think I was not too far off perhaps? Because ORMs,  and 
> relational-algebra-to-SQL compilers (one thing I find fascinating personally, 
> but ...) would be fine examples of software that'd run into the kind of 
> problems I was talking about.
> One popular (in every respect) example in the Java world would be Hibernate, 
> as not only does its code generation not take into account the specific 
> characteristic of the underlying rdbms, but additionally, by its convenience 
> of use, it creates the illusion, in a way, that treating the DB as a "black 
> box" will bring no disadvantage (or even, is a good thing).

A lost of applications don't push the hardware. For these applications
fairly big abstractions are useful. This includes most of the projects
I've worked on.

A layered approach is probably the best one. At the bottom would be a
common low-level DB interface, ala, JDBC or Ryan's db.plt. A
relational algebra to SQL compiler is also a useful building block
sitting on top of this. One can layer an ORM on top of these and then
drop down to the lower levels as needed.

Cheers,
N.

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