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Par2: SQL tips -- Why not to let Clarion do certain things for you.
1998-10-07 -- Jack Toering
 
>- I currently have calculated fields in the DB which are perfectly maintained by the front-ends. Is this also doable in a replication situation?< Doable, but I wouldn't do it. Unless there are a lot of complex multi-record lookups with business math, it's awefully easy to do with the back end. It requires a trigger, which btw is no big deal. If you are doing a lot of work at the embed, "before saving record to disk" You may want to look at if it would be better off done on the server. Then you would be getting into a trigger. The test for me is this. If it has to happen every time, and especially if the data is inaccurate or makes no sense without it being performed, then move it to the server. If it fits the definition of a rule, it belongs with the data. I realize that you don't want to re-architect everything, but a couple of things you will have to face whether you like it or not if you go to any RDBMS: 1. You HAVE to have at least one unique index for each table, and the RDBMS and Clarion has to know about it. True, you can make it without, but wait until you try to maintain a record. Desktop databases can resolve this situation with a record number. RDBMSes don't have record numbers. 2. You may not have your data related in the optimal manner for an RDBMS. If you are holding things together with strings etc., then at least you'd better have something like DataModeler in C5EE to show you all of the areas where key values are not the same type or length. You can get away with that on a desktop, but in an RDBMS, it can get wierd on you. Make sure when you make the database, that you say to ignore trailing blanks in comparisons also. You CAN do it from the Clarion end if you wish, but that's a lot shakier than letting the RDBMS doing it. If you are crossing databases, you have not choice but to have Clarion do it and framing is also out then. 3. Don't assume that your code is ready to go because it comes up and runs and you can browse your records. This is an area that I disagree strongly with Topspeed. The Clarion VIEW on a desktop database does not act like the Clarion VIEW when working with an RDBMS. - When working with an RDBMS, only the fields PROJECTed in the VIEW are reliable in the buffer. The others are what is termed, undefined. Furthurmore, if no fields are PROJECTed, it fetches the entire record. If you simply add a filter to an existing procedure to where you have to declare one of the record members HOT, you now are PROJECTing a field. This means that you now lose all of the other fields that you had. The embeds may have been depending on that code. So you must seach through the embeds, and declare every variable HOT that you are using. Don't miss any. If you do, you may be working with a variable that was not declared HOT, but since the left over variable is in the record buffer from some other operation, it is used in your calculation. - When working with a desktop database, all of the fields are valid in the record buffer, regardless of what fields are PROJECTed in the VIEW. E.G. the desktop database gets the entire record whether or not the fields are in the VIEW. Explanation: What this means is that your .app may be full of bugs that were hidden by the "fortuitous" or "unfortuitous" "behavior" or "misbehavior" of the desktop VIEW. You have some debugging to be done. You would have found these bugs before in development IF these VIEWs worked the same. Now instead of one procedure, you have many to debug, and it's no longer fresh in your mind. Fields that were previously available in the buffer are suddenly unreliable. They are left overs from other records that were last updated by a previous VIEW and/or a FORM. You could have a mix of many records in the buffer. Now you know the pitfalls. The ones that are the trickiest are the process procedures. The browse takes care of itself in MOST cases, but check your embeds for calculated non-browse fields. The FORM is no issue as it doesn't use a VIEW. The REPORT is not often an issue unless you are doing some calculations appart from the visible fields on the report. But any procedure that uses a VIEW is vulnerable.


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