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ABC: Retrieving whole records on lookup 1998-12-31 -- David A. Bayliss Newsgroups: topspeed.products.c5ee.bugs >Setup a lookup to a browse on a field accepted with the ABC template. After >the lookup, when the data comes back from the browse, the only data >available is what was in the lookup browse - NOT the entire record. In the >CW templates, the entire record is retrieved. > >I don't know whether this is intentional, but it sure is dumb! Why would >anyone want to only retrieve a piece of a record on a lookup? If one is using databases in a third normal form fashion then it is both possible, reasonable and extremely efficient to identify a file from the value of its primary key. In addition to the primary fields most selects will populate few fields to act as a textual primary (a visual cue to the user), these also get returned to the form to act as a visual cue. Traditionally CW has returned the entire file record from a select instead of the primary field. I don't know if this was intentional but it sure is dumb. Why anyone would want to load an entire record when they are only going to use a couple of fields is hard to fathom. Forcing the callee to do a reget (v. expensive, esp. under SQL) just in case the caller might happen to want certain values is a classic example of why machines are 1000x faster than they were 20 years ago but don't -run- any faster. Anyhow, in C5EEA there is a SelectWholeRecord field which can be set on the browse which -will- force the full reget. This way, people get to choose the way they work. DAB >A work around this is to retrieve the entire looked up record in the >accepted embed just after the goofy lookup. > >I think this is due to the use of "IF SELF.Run(1,SelectREcord)" which >somehow only retrieves the browse cue in the lookup browse, but I can't >prove it. I can't find any documentation on SELF.Run(). Does anyone know >what this does and why? Printed November 21, 2024, 11:58 am This article has been viewed/printed 35384 times. Google search has resulted in 13 hits on this article since January 25, 2004. |