On 2014-09-06 6:12 PM, Jan Wieck wrote:
On 09/06/2014 04:21 AM, Marko Tiikkaja wrote:

We wrap these things into (sometimes) simple-looking function so that
none of the application developers ever run any SQL.  We define an
interface between the application and the database, and that interface
is implemented using PL/PgSQL functions.  Sure, sometimes one function
will just fire off a single UPDATE .. RETURNING, or a SELECT, but that
doesn't matter.  The trick is to be consistent everywhere.

There is precisely your root problem. Instead of educating your
application developers on how to properly use a relational database
system, you try to make it foolproof.

Foolproofing is just one thing that's good about this solution. The other one would be that the application *doesn't need to know* what's going on behind the scenes. The app deals with a consistent API, and we make that API happen with PL/PgSQL.

Guess what, the second you made something foolproof, evolution will
create a dumber fool. This is a race you cannot win.

You're completely missing the point.


.marko


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