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Good points. Many of the calculations would be better served by a nice SQL view that includes UDF's to do things like calculating BPCS on hand. How would a user, using an Excel spreadsheet say give me all the shipping going out today using a stored procedure? Rob Berendt -- Group Dekko Services, LLC Dept 01.073 PO Box 2000 Dock 108 6928N 400E Kendallville, IN 46755 http://www.dekko.com "Joe Pluta" <joepluta@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx 05/05/2005 11:48 AM Please respond to Midrange Systems Technical Discussion <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To "'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion'" <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject RE: Normalization was Left AS/400 and Returned > From: rob@xxxxxxxxx > > The users are going to generate their own queries. If we insisted on a > strictly programmer controlled access via stored procedures, etc, then > what would happen but the users insisting on us duplicating all data to a > PC so that they can run their own queries against it. You've said this sort of thing before, and I simply disagree. The users don't need access to every field in the database. In addition, I'll bet that there are lots of calculations that would be better served if you provided a single programmatic access rather than forcing them to do the calculations themselves. But we're out of architecture and into the land of business requirements. At that point, you have to decide whether your business requirements override best architectural practices. I can't make that decision for you, obviously. I can just tell you that you are locking your database into your user's Excel and Access queries, and from an architectural standpoint that's a bad place to be. Joe -- This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
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