i.e, can we just use stored procedures for everything? In a web-site backed by a DB that is.
2 Answers
Stored Procedures have their benefits:
- Minimize traffic back & forth between the application & database, wasting bandwidth
- MVC: Separation of persistence layer
- Scale loads better than application code (IE:
ORDER BY
will always trump application code)
Stored Procedure Cons:
- Database dependency - ANSI is becoming more widely supported, but stored procedure code (not the query/queries in them) is not standardized at this time
Conclusion
Yes, stored procedures & functions can do most of what you'd probably ever want to do with data. The decision to use them is determined by design choices - to be database agnostic, most would not use stored procedures. Choose what best suits the requirements, not your preference.
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1With regard to the original question - using stored procedures 'for everything' - it's almost certainly a very bad idea.– magmaMay 4, 2011 at 5:36
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as in "Yes, stored procedures & functions can do most of what you'd probably ever want to do with data", you mean? I agree.– magmaMay 4, 2011 at 16:38
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@magma: "most" isn't an absolute, while "almost certainly is a very bad idea" is dangerously close. May 5, 2011 at 0:37
In short: no. And, that's probably a bad idea.
See: Arguments for/against Business Logic in stored procedures
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Not a great question to refer to - the issue is subjective/argumentative, and really depends on the application design. May 4, 2011 at 5:07
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@omg Because the issue is subjective and it depends on the application design and we don't know much about Ada's application design, it's a worth read.– magmaMay 4, 2011 at 5:35
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So, you're unable to ask for clarification? Or just unwilling, when you could've supplied the link on the premise of being an exact duplicate? May 5, 2011 at 0:38