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  4. Views vs Tables

Views vs Tables

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  • G GuyThiebaut

    I recently tested updates on a mock view, in SQL Server 2008, which contained a join between two tables. I did this because where I work the majority of what our users see is through views and they occasionally need to update what they see. I read up on it beforehand and all the documentation pointed to this being possible as long as it was unambiguous as to which row in which table was being updated. The update did work - I then tried to break it and succeeded by using an aggregate function in the view so that there was ambiguity in what would be updated. It can be useful to insert or update a view, since if one is passing a view into a control then it is easier to perform an update, on the source of that control, than to have to attach lots of meta data documenting which tables to update.

    “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

    ― Christopher Hitchens

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    J Offline
    jschell
    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    GuyThiebaut wrote:

    since if one is passing a view into a control then it is easier to perform an updat

    Control? As in a GUI control? For small systems with stand along apps that might be appropriate. For anything larger one should have a database layer. And of course it won't work at all for a web app.

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    • G GuyThiebaut

      "But that's not a good idea. It doesn't lead to a properly layered application." - I don't understand why using a view in a control would do this, could you let me know why?

      “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

      ― Christopher Hitchens

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      jschell
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      GuyThiebaut wrote:

      I don't understand why using a view in a control would do this, could you let me know why?

      Because if you use the view in the GUI then there is no database layer. Nor presumably a business layer for that matter.

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      • J Jorgen Andersson

        Mycroft Holmes wrote:

        You can insert into views if there is 1 table in the view (how dumb is that)

        It's quite useful if you want to filter the contents of a table for a certain group of users.

        "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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        jschell
        wrote on last edited by
        #17

        Jörgen Andersson wrote:

        It's quite useful if you want to filter the contents of a table for a certain group of users.

        Why would you do that in the database versus the application layer? And of course in general when you say 'user' if you mean an actual database user then there can be negative impacts such as licensing.

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        • J Jorgen Andersson

          Mycroft Holmes wrote:

          You can insert into views if there is 1 table in the view (how dumb is that)

          It's quite useful if you want to filter the contents of a table for a certain group of users.

          "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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          Mycroft Holmes
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          Jörgen Andersson wrote:

          f you want to filter the contents of a table for a certain group of users

          Sure but that is one of the uses of a view - a very old fashioned use, but still valid. Who puts authorisation logic at that level these days. Apps no longer have to rely on the database for authorisation, very 80s :laugh:

          Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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          • J jschell

            GuyThiebaut wrote:

            I don't understand why using a view in a control would do this, could you let me know why?

            Because if you use the view in the GUI then there is no database layer. Nor presumably a business layer for that matter.

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            G Offline
            GuyThiebaut
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            There is a database layer - the control is populated via a query from this layer. Any updates to this view are then passed through this layer via update commands. So we can lock down particular columns and perform verification on the values before update so that we both have a business and database layer. So I am still not getting what is wrong with using the results of a view in a GUI.

            “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

            ― Christopher Hitchens

            J 1 Reply Last reply
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            • J jschell

              Jörgen Andersson wrote:

              It's quite useful if you want to filter the contents of a table for a certain group of users.

              Why would you do that in the database versus the application layer? And of course in general when you say 'user' if you mean an actual database user then there can be negative impacts such as licensing.

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              Jorgen Andersson
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              Because some companies are quite divided. The right place to do it is in the application, but I've been working for companies where the database department were responsible for that one department couldn't see the same columns as another department. It's a lot easier to keep track on this with a view than with column permissions. When it comes to licensing it doesn't matter. It's the number of actual users that counts, not the number of users you setup in the database. It's a common misconception.

              "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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              • M Mycroft Holmes

                Jörgen Andersson wrote:

                f you want to filter the contents of a table for a certain group of users

                Sure but that is one of the uses of a view - a very old fashioned use, but still valid. Who puts authorisation logic at that level these days. Apps no longer have to rely on the database for authorisation, very 80s :laugh:

                Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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                J Offline
                Jorgen Andersson
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                :sigh: I know, see my answer to jschell.

                "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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                • J Jorgen Andersson

                  :sigh: I know, see my answer to jschell.

                  "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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                  M Offline
                  Mycroft Holmes
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  Yeah I read that and thought poor bastard, I just hope you are not working with one of those old EIS systems as well!

                  Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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                  • M Mycroft Holmes

                    Yeah I read that and thought poor bastard, I just hope you are not working with one of those old EIS systems as well!

                    Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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                    Jorgen Andersson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    I'm at a different place now, with a different set of pains.

                    Mycroft Holmes wrote:

                    I just hope you are not working with one of those old EIS systems as well!

                    Depends on what EIS stands for. If it is Executive Information System, then yes kind of. It's my own design though. It's the users that's the main pain now.

                    "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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                    • G GuyThiebaut

                      There is a database layer - the control is populated via a query from this layer. Any updates to this view are then passed through this layer via update commands. So we can lock down particular columns and perform verification on the values before update so that we both have a business and database layer. So I am still not getting what is wrong with using the results of a view in a GUI.

                      “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

                      ― Christopher Hitchens

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      jschell
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      GuyThiebaut wrote:

                      Any updates to this view are then passed through this layer via update commands.

                      Either you are expressing it incorrectly or there is no layer. You said you used the "view" in the "control". If instead you are using a DTO in the "control" then that is not the same as what you said. If however you are using a language specific layer to access the a view in the control then there is no database layer.

                      GuyThiebaut wrote:

                      So I am still not getting what is wrong with using the results of a view in a GUI.

                      First, the question, per the OP, is why someone would insist that only views be used. It isn't whether views might or might not be used. Second, as I already said your terminology/phrasing is not precise. If you have a database layer then you are not using the view in the GUI. What you are using is the results of the database layer or even business layer in the GUI. The fact that they originated from a view in another layer is irrelevant and expressing it that way should be avoided because data model entity might not originate in a one to one mapping with the database. And the user (GUI) should not concern itself with how it did originate from he database.

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                      • J Jorgen Andersson

                        Because some companies are quite divided. The right place to do it is in the application, but I've been working for companies where the database department were responsible for that one department couldn't see the same columns as another department. It's a lot easier to keep track on this with a view than with column permissions. When it comes to licensing it doesn't matter. It's the number of actual users that counts, not the number of users you setup in the database. It's a common misconception.

                        "The ones who care enough to do it right care too much to compromise." Matthew Faithfull

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                        J Offline
                        jschell
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #25

                        Jörgen Andersson wrote:

                        Because some companies are quite divided.

                        Certainly. And some companies need to create their own database. But in the general case neither of those are true.

                        Jörgen Andersson wrote:

                        It's the number of actual users that counts, not the number of users you setup in the database. It's a common misconception.

                        I know how it works. The fact that user licensing exists at all specifically indicates that support in the database per user is something that is in fact significant. Unless you are claiming that only a single user connects at a time, then my comment about user licensing stands. And if you are claiming that then it is far from what any normal business would use.

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