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Posted by William Stacey [MVP] on 06/03/05 17:25
But your talking design now. That has nothing to do with SQLCLR
integration. I don't see the DB design process changing just because of
SQLCLR. You will still have DBAs/ DB architects doing that work (or
should). The app guys are still going to be the app guys. You need both.
So nothing has changed in that regard.
--
William Stacey [MVP]
"DA Morgan" <damorgan@psoug.org> wrote in message
news:1117806959.589791@yasure...
> William Stacey [MVP] wrote:
>>>I agree with what you've said. But it opens the door for them to do
>>>what they have generally been precluded from doing before: Design
>>>tables, views, etc. It blurs the line. And having seen schemas
>>>designed by Java developers I tremble in fear at what the VB crowd
>>>might be capable of doing.
>>
>>
>> - Not a VB programmer, but if I was, would be offended by that statement.
>> You seem to have some issue with VB.
>
> Then let me extend the perceived insult. Over the years I have seen
> RDBMS designs from C, C++, Java, Pascal, and many many other developers.
> And the number that were acceptable, not event good, can be counted on
> the fingers of one hand.
>
> It is unrealistic and unreasonable to expect that someone with no formal
> training in a subject can do well in it. And that isn't just about
> front-end developers ... it is about any subject. I wouldn't want my
> pharmacist removing my gall bladder either.
>
> The difference is that most people know their limitations or are
> precluded by laws from doing things they have not been trained to do.
> (and yes I am speaking of the professions here). My issue with those
> who write VB is that the number of them that connect to databases and
> thus think they have some level of expertise is high. The percentage
> of them that could make a decision with respect to denormalizing from
> 4NF to 3NF for performance quite small.
>
> And this is just my experience so your mileage may vary.
> --
> Daniel A. Morgan
> http://www.psoug.org
> damorgan@x.washington.edu
> (replace x with u to respond)
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