it does not,  but the odds the same user will run this command by this id
in two different sessions at the same time are very low.

this type of code exist  for PO,SO, Invoices, to assign the next line item
# in many apps.


On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 10:40 AM Michael Nolan <htf...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
>
> On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 6:28 AM stan <st...@panix.com> wrote:
>
>> I am trying to create a function to automatically create a reference value
>> when a record is inserted into a table. I want the reference value to
>> consist of the user that is doing the insert, plus a couple of dates, plus
>> a sequence number, where the sequence number will increment every time a
>> given user inserts a record. because this sequence number is user
>> specific,
>> my first  thought is not to use a set of sequences for it, but to do this
>> by
>> selecting the maximum sequence number that user has entered in the past.
>>
>> What happens if two transactions by/for the same user are committed at
> around the same point in time?  The advantage of sequences is they're
> guaranteed to be unique, I'm not sure counting the number of previous
> records and adding one will always assure that.
> --
> Mike Nolan
>

Reply via email to