<slowly standing - trembling, with creaks and pops as he rises>  Overlays in
Turbo Pascal

One of the more challenging aspects of writing Pro*C user exit code for
Forms 2.3 on a DOS client running against an Oracle 5 database was trying to
link 1,000 or so C functions (at one function per file for modularity) to
create a large iapx (?correct name for version?) executable within a
segmented 16-bit architecture.  [These young whipper-snappers today have it
SO easy!]

Don Granaman
[OraSaurus]

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To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, June 26, 2002 6:20 AM


As I recall, the Dec product was called Rdb, and generally regarded as quite
good. It was subsequently bought by  Oracle.

The old hierarchical and network systems did not require foreign keys,
because all records were explicitly linked via hard-coded pointers. So you
HAD to get your design right before building the data model, otherwise
retrieval would be a nightmare.

Because relational systems allow joins at query time, a major slackness has
crept into database model design. Like not always protecting the integrity
of PKs...

Talking of working on small memory machines - here is a test for your age in
the industry - all those who can remember writing overlays stand up! I
suspect the current crop of PC software engineers have never encountered
overlay programing.

peter
edinburgh

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