I find stored procedures to be a God-send.  The alternative, external code, is 
the risky, difficult and often poorer performing approach to the problems sp's 
solve.   What better way to interact programatically with your database than 
WITH your database?

The only people that I see frown upon them don't understand them, are afraid of 
them, and so find ways to justify their views about them in negative terms.  I 
suppose that's human nature.  But once they get "turned on" to stored 
procedures, their views change.  

As for selling sp's to them, especially if they are management, there's nothing 
more convincing than a demo.  And a real good way to demo their effectiveness 
is through a remote connection, preferrably across a time zone or two, where 
the task involves many (hundreds of thousands) of queries that the external 
script would have to do one at a time, over the net.  The sp would just run 
them inside as part of the sp call, locally, in a tiny fraction of the time.  

  

-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org 
[mailto:pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Some Developer
Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 8:29 PM
To: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Subject: [GENERAL] Why are stored procedures looked on so negatively?

I've done quite a bit of reading on stored procedures recently and the 
consensus seems to be that you shouldn't use them unless you really must.

I don't understand this argument. If you implement all of your logic in the 
application then you need to make a network request to the database server, 
return the required data from the database to the app server, do the processing 
and then return the results. A stored procedure is going to be a lot faster 
than that even if you just take away network latency / transfer time.

I'm in the middle of building a database and was going to make extensive use of 
stored procedures and trigger functions because it makes more sense for the 
actions to happen at the database layer rather than in the app layer.

Should I use them or not?


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