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That's the question. Give only one reason you think why have OODB failed or why many systems nowadays still use relational databases.

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odbms.org – _ande_turner_ Oct 5 '08 at 1:58
I think this one is en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begging_the_question – Goran Oct 5 '08 at 8:28

11 Answers

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The main reason is SQL. Its very useful to be able to use data from a database in other contexts outside of the application and often with object databases the data is stored in a format that can't easily be queried. With a relational database the data can become part of a data warehouse, for instance, or just queried by sys admins etc.

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Exactly; SQL can be used from almost any programming environment (or even directly from the query analyzer), while OODBMSes always have some nonstandard, programmatic-only way to query objects in them. – Jacob Oct 4 '08 at 20:44
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You can query a DB4O with SQL. There's a small perf hit involved, but it is supported.. – boris callens Jan 14 '09 at 8:58
+1 just for the handle. Pets.com? But I think a major reason is that every OODB thinks they've solved all the world's problems, and charge accordingly. Companies don't want to bet the business on a small, unproven company, which is why Oracle exists. – chris Mar 28 at 2:27
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If I can amplify Phil's point: the standardization of SQL. OODB's have tried query languages such as OQL but they never seemed to follow a true standard. Also the quality of the query languages were suspect, arguably due to lack of standardization. Standards foster competition, which spawns quality.

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In my current pet project using db4o I have a line (C# 3.5): IList<Users> list = Persistence.Database.Query<Users>(u => u.Name == "Admin"); Using strong typed lambda expression to get a (lazy) list of objects from the database. I'd say that beats SQL as a standard. – Goran Oct 6 '08 at 22:34
how many 3rd party tools support that line? Can a sys-admin use that line at 11 pm at night? To me standardization allows the creation of tools both for developers and sys admin staff. – Michael Easter Oct 7 '08 at 22:05
db4o supports several forms of query languages. As a programmer I strongly favor the Linq variant off course. – boris callens Jan 14 '09 at 9:02
Which standard? SQL 92 is not even implemented, as soon as you have a date in your database you have a problem – Stephan Eggermont Sep 25 at 17:59
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That, and o/r-mappers. Through them, the difference to true OO-DBs becomes way smaller, while the aforementioned benefits stay valid.

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Can we answer more than once? Another reason is that relational DB's have a strong foundation in mathematics: from the definition of a relation, right through to the normal forms, the theory is rock solid. It is true that the relational model does not map well to OO, but IMHO the benefits and stability of that model outweigh the mapping problem.

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Yes you can. And good second answer as well. – Scott Alan Miller Oct 4 '08 at 17:23
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Set/Relational theory is king, indeed – Camilo Díaz Oct 4 '08 at 18:46
any OO database could (and many do) provide relational access to its data. – lubos hasko Mar 10 at 0:01
Hmm. They might have a foundation there, but they picked the wrong abstractions. The base abstraction should have been a partial ordering (is that english?), not a set. – Stephan Eggermont Sep 25 at 17:56
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Just because OODB are not the mainstream we should still consider the successes that they have had. Cache and Zope are both widely used (relatively) but would be considered successful by some standards.

Perhaps the biggest reason that OODB have not taken hold dramatically is because of the success of the hybrid object-relational systems that take most of the potential marketshare from OODB: PostgreSQL and Informix.

I know that this does not directly answer the question but it is, I think, part of the equation. Overall, though, I think that momentum and the heavily ingrained thought processes supporting relation databases make it difficult for people to switch. Currently the DB profession is trained almost exclusively in relational theory making your DB professionals very interested in avoiding OODB and academia teaches DB theory for practitioners almost exclusively on relational.

Until large, corporate DBAs and mainstream professors and curriculum and turning out staff beyond developers prepared to managed OODB I feel that it is unlikely to see mass appeal no matter how good it is from the development side.

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I think it's because "object databases" are solving a problem that (almost)nobody really has. For simple persistence of object graphs, the serialization built into most OO environments is "good enough". If you want to do sophisticated operations on a subset of your data, then a relational database and SQL are a perfect fit.

Other than some fringe applications (enormous object graphs that can't be kept in memory, but for which the relationships don't simplify down well for RDBMS use), there really isn't any need for these tools.

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"I think it's because "object databases" are solving a problem that (almost)nobody really has." I don't think this is the case: look at the sheer number of ORM projects in use to combat impedance mismatch. – Phillip Oldham Nov 16 '08 at 0:07
That's kind of my point. ORM systems handle the match between the OO layer and the database representation well enough that a "pure" object database isn't perceived to add much value. Also, you can relatively easily hire someone to manage an SQL database, but experts in any OODB are much scarcer. – Mark Bessey Nov 20 '08 at 20:38
I think that Object Databases are a solution looking for a good problem, and I kind of agree with Mark Bessey. – thomasrutter Apr 30 at 14:27
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RDBMs are (built on a strong theoretical foundation, have been in the market for a much longer time, can model data more faithfully than OODBs in many cases, can be used by more DBAs than OODBs). That's one reason in the form of a relational tuple.

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select * from nice – Michael Easter Oct 4 '08 at 20:33
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I think that there are two philosophical reasons.

First, people traditionally tend to separate persistence from real functionality. Once you strip away an object's "life" away from it and keep it primarily for persistence, it becomes a record, and then there is a tendency to treat it as a "lifeless" data object.

Following on that, when people think of a large collection of very similar things, they start thinking of them as tables rather than objects.

I think with O/R the distinction is starting to disappear. For example, I use hibernate to dump really complex class hierarchies into a MySQL database. However, I don't write performance-critical stuff for my project so I'm sure it's not done efficiently.

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+1 marxidad

Pointers are BAD in data models... OO model is very much like the old network model, which is not only proven to be inferior theoretically to the relational model, but also a pain to use in practice.

It's weird how failed data models (hierarchical -> XML, network -> OO) keep getting resurrected. To me, not learning from the past is plain silly, it looks like such a waste of precious human brain cells.

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why pointers are BAD in data models? you should explain better what you mean because just about any O/R mapping tool is using pointers in its generated data structures. – lubos hasko Mar 10 at 0:05
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Pointers are a PHYSICAL memory concept, to say that they form a LOGICAL data model is somewhat of a contradiction. – Andrew from NZSG Mar 17 at 1:25
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Well, it's strange isn't it? There is such a push towards domain driven design as the zenith of object orientated analysis and design, and there are enterprise patterns out there to leverage ORM systems to persist our objects. It just makes total sense to me that if your application DESIGN is object orientated and domain focussed at heart, that an OODB will greatly benefit your application.

Aside from the issues around maturity and uptake, from a philosophical perspective an OODB would appear beneficial or an OO application. not having to maintain that mapping layer for starters;)

But look, if you aren't doing domain drive design and use objects as data objects and like your stored procs, then you're not really going to get it;)

There are a

k

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One reason is that databases are about data, and objects are about structures and algorithms. Once you take the data and embed it in classes, you characterize the relationships and operations in a static structure. Databases, on the other hand, are about unstructuring the data into a bunch of instances of atomic tables that can be reassembled into different structures (usually with classes) without disturbing the integrity of the atoms.

Databases are somewhat analogous to hexahexaflexagons.

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