Martijn Tonies <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Nevertheless, foreign key constraints belong in the database, not in
> your application... If you have foreign keys (your wording), you need
> foreign key constraints. Period. Plain and simple. No discussion :-)

Foreign keys are foreign keys. Constraints are constraints. Foreign key
constraints are... well, you do the math.

So, in your opinion, MySql was never really a relational database until
whatever version enforcing refential constraints was released?

Peter Normann



-- 
MySQL General Mailing List
For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
To unsubscribe:    http://lists.mysql.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to