On Nov 10, 2010, at 3:31 PM, Jerry B. Altzman wrote:
> I know that in the commercial database world use of stored procedures is The 
> Way Things Are Pretty Much Done, but I've not seen it in my brief forays 
> through the bulk of PHP code I've examined (and needless to say, written). Am 
> I just out of it? Is it just not considered usual practice, or am I blind?

Personally, I think stored procedures are useful when you have DBAs in control 
of the database and critical business logic and they don't trust the developers 
interacting with the data.  Also useful if you have several different codebases 
acting on the data.  A lot of php code is done with the least common 
denominator in mind (i.e. somebody on a free shared hosting account), so it 
won't take advantage of the advanced tools available (non-default extensions, 
db features that require more recent versions of mysql [although most are 
probably on 5.0+ now], etc).

However, if you do essentially have one codebase doing all of your data 
manipulation and you don't have dedicated DBAs, I think using stored procedures 
doesn't really make sense because it's dividing up where your business logic is 
located and potentially making things more confusing or harder to debug.

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