Jeremy - In his OpenWorld Guru session I believe Ken Jacobs debunked this
myth
http://www.oracle.com/oracleworld/online/sanfrancisco/index.html?chats.html
<http://www.oracle.com/oracleworld/online/sanfrancisco/index.html?chats.html
> 
 
If I am mistaken as to which session discussed this, perhaps someone will
provide the correct session.
I think when Java was first introduced, some people thought PL/SQL would be
replaced. That hasn't panned out. Few sites seem to be using the
server-based JVM. For Java, most sites seem to put their Java in the
Application Server. Most people say that PL/SQL is better at database
manipulation, so when you need performance, you are probably going to be
using PL/SQL anyway.



Dennis Williams 
DBA, 40%OCP 
Lifetouch, Inc. 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

 
 -----Original Message-----
Sent: Thursday, December 19, 2002 3:05 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L



I'm back in a development house that is focused on Oracle development, along
with J2EE and various other strains. I've become (by default) the resident
guru for PL/SQL development and technical implementation support for our
professional services group, and as such I've been trying to make sure that
the product and utilities that we deploy are going to be supportable going
forward as best as possible.

Here's my problem: A coupla years ago I heard from someone that Oracle had
plans to phase out PL/SQL, gradually moving folks to Java or other languages
to handle triggers, custom functions, etc. I could swear that at the time
there was evidence presented that version 10 of Oracle would not contain
PL/SQL; however I can't for the life of me remember where I saw it.

Soooo... where can I glean information about what technologies Oracle plans
to support in the future? Of course I expect that to be a constantly moving
target, but Oracle 10 can't be that far away, and I'd rather replace PL/SQL
on my own terms instead of having to either turn away customers or spend a
720-hour stretch hooked up to the caffeine IV porting code ;-)

-- 
Please see the official ORACLE-L FAQ: http://www.orafaq.net
-- 
Author: DENNIS WILLIAMS
  INET: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Fat City Network Services    -- 858-538-5051 http://www.fatcity.com
San Diego, California        -- Mailing list and web hosting services
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To REMOVE yourself from this mailing list, send an E-Mail message
to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (note EXACT spelling of 'ListGuru') and in
the message BODY, include a line containing: UNSUB ORACLE-L
(or the name of mailing list you want to be removed from).  You may
also send the HELP command for other information (like subscribing).

Reply via email to