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Jerry, Thanks for your perspective. 1. WDSc.This tool is an integrated developer environment, which runs on your desktop. The paradigm is so completely different than SEU. If you are still viewing SAVE and CTRL+S as the same thing, then you are missing the point of an IDE, and missing the point of WDSc. SEU does not compare to WDSc in any way. This is like comparing Notepad to Word functionally. Besides, these are NOT users who are doing this. These are developers - who should have a better sense of this concept. Another thing, if I ever had to tell my users where the data resides, or where the work is being done, then I am living in the 80s. For developers who live in the 80s, then it is the same thing. For developers who understand the right-tool-for-the-right-job, WDSc and SEU do not compare.
2. SQL vs. nativeNathan did NOT say "faster". You did. I answered for "better" - that is completely different. And I did not interpret Nathan's reply - I asked him what he meant by "better". SQL, for me, is better because it is the future of System i database access - this is the method which will receive all the support and enhancements. I don't think speed is the issue - I think you can design applications where database access speed is not an issue. That is, you code for performance AND maintainability.
3. Dr.Frank'n'meIt is my opinion that if you are thinking "green" you are thinking mostly outdated. Just a generic term to cover AS/400 syndrome - not a term to define the interface. I agree, record access has nothing to do with the user interface, but using outdated practices to build applications is the same backward thinking as avoiding GUI because it is not "better".
TrevorP.S. I am not sure Dr. Frank would fit he and I in the same bucket when it comes to the term "futurist". I am sure his bucket has more brains.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jerry Adams" <jerry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Midrange Systems Technical Discussion" <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, December 15, 2006 11:55 AM Subject: Re: Saving the System i: Fight Rather Than Switch
Trevor, Usually I'm in the same camp (philosophically, if not technically) as you. But I had a couple of issues with your recent reply. Inserts below. * Jerry C. Adams *IBM System i5/iSeries Programmer/Analyst B&W Wholesale Distributors, Inc.* * voice 615.995.7024 fax 615.995.1201 email jerry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:jerry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Trevor Perry wrote:For example, you compare SAVE in SEU with CTRL+S in WDSc. However, thesethings are two completely separate tasks. SAVE in SEU will save you currentmember for you to your development system. In WDSc, this function is donefor you. Your PC is the development system, and it keeps all of the changes you make as you develop in the Integrated Development Environment. CTRL+S inWDSc is publishing your changes from the development server to thedeployment or production server. Not apples to apples. You are complainingabout the present based on something different from the past.While you're obviously correct technically, Trevor, it is apples-to-apples if one's perception is ultimately to save the source code. Where it resides during keying is, of course, relevant technically, but frankly is not relevant perceptually (sic?). If I gave my users answers like that, they'd whop me upside the head with a baseball or cricket bat: "I want to do a function - period."And, you did not define what you meant by 'better' when you said "native record level access is better than SQL for retrieving records by key,updating them, and writing them". While the AS/400 faithful may think it is 'better' in some green outdated sense, the System i futurists do not agree.My perception of what Nathan meant was that native access is faster when trying to retrieve one record, usually randomly. Indeed, the mantra I have heard at numerous sessions on SQL at COMMON is that SQL is great for group-at-a-time processing, but barfs (compared to native) on single record access. And the term "green outdated sense" makes no sense to me in this or any context. Green screen -vs- GUI (presentation) was not the issue; record access was. And just who are these "System i futurists" (besides you and Dr. Frank) and just why do they not agree? Because the statement "single record access is faster using native access methods rather than SQL" is false or because there's something coming down the pike that will eventually make the statement false?Trevor----- Original Message ----- From: "Nathan Andelin" <nandelin@xxxxxxxxx>To: "Midrange Systems Technical Discussion" <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, December 14, 2006 5:51 PM Subject: Re: Saving the System i: Fight Rather Than SwitchTrevor Perry: I wrote about AS/400 Syndrome ..."Maybe, this ability to see no further than your own technology is a disease? Letʼs call it AS/400 syndrome, and work on a cure!" "Are you stuck in the past? Do you have AS400 Syndrome?" In the past, I entered "save" in the command line of SEU and my program was saved to disk in the blink of an eye. In the present, I press CTR+S in Websphere Developer Studio Client and amsomewhat entertained by three (3) iterations of the progress bar (growingand shrinking, growing and shrinking, growing and shrinking) while I wait for the file to be saved. You have a great site, Trevor. And I appreciate the recognition the System i platform is gaining from it. But in some ways, the past is better than the present. The AS/400 faithful are a discriminating group. They've learned for example that native record level access is better than SQL for retrieving records by key, updating them, and writing them. The key is leveraging the the past to ensure the future, not discardingthe past for things that grab immediate attention, but have less intrinsicvalue. Nathan.--This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing listTo 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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