Tino Wildenhain wrote:


We do not talk about exceptions here. I'm talking about transactions.
And you never know who will be aborting a transaction after your
call to the function. No need for referral to the fine manuals :-)


Common Tino, you let users abort transactions? Who else is going to be aborting transactions besides you the programmer?
I would never allow that as they would mess everything up.

I only abort transactions in my end user apps when the server throws a error, I then evaluate that error and take appropriate action. That's why having exceptions in your function would work. You are inviting trouble letting users control when a transaction ends or starts for that matter, they have a tendency to leave them in a non commited state for long periods of time.

Transactions need to be short and sweet.

Sure a very long latency email might slow up a transaction for a second or two, but like I said for a internal use corporate app, you will never even see one second to send a email.

It all depends on your app what will work best.

There is nothing wrong with sending a email directly from a trigger or function. If you really need to scale there are better ways, but for 99 percent of apps the way I suggested will work fine and dandy.

I myself, for a high volume email notifictation system would probably use some form of a queue, but that would be severe overkill for the majority of apps, if it's not broke don't fix it.

I guess we will have to agree to disagree :-)


Later,

Tony


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