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Re: Which Doc to Read - 10g or 9i ?

From: hpuxrac <johnbhurley_at_sbcglobal.net>
Date: 3 Jul 2006 12:10:57 -0700
Message-ID: <1151953857.533035.21990@h44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>

joel garry wrote:
> > There will also be plenty of things you won't find in the books mentioned
> > earlier. Should I go out and buy every book that is available?
>
> No, but some people think what books you have available in your
> workspace and that show use are a reasonable indicator of what level of
> work you do. I don't quite agree with that, since some people might
> have their books at home or on electronic media or have an eidetic
> memory or whatever. But a statement that everything you need is in the
> manual - at best that means your work is limited, at worst you may be
> myth-mongering.
>
> Personally, I do have shelves of Oracle books. Some are crap. I tend
> not to recommend those. Most are used infrequently, a few have little
> nuggets that make them worth having gone through once. The ones
> recommended in this thread are worth their weight in careers.
>
> >
> > > In
> > > particular, everyone should read the "How to Log a Good Performance
> > > Service Request" note. Simply going through the steps required to
> > > delineate a problem can often solve it. The other books mentioned in
> > > this thread show how to solve such problems, and even decide if there
> > > is a problem, too.
> > >
> >
> > What problems? Any problems?
>
> Well, this thread started about performance and what developers can do
> right. Simply following the instructions in the manuals may lead to
> problems - for example, where in the manuals does it explain possible
> performance issues with committing in a loop? How about the optimal
> way to perform DDL in a trigger? Where is X$KSQST explained? All
> developers are going to have superstitions and misconceptions about the
> best ways to do things with Oracle. Jeez, someone could write a whole
> book about these kinds of things. Maybe even more than one. The best
> ones demonstrate how even the most experienced developers need to
> question and test their assumptions.

Now let's not start trying to apply some common sense and seasoned experience to this thread Joel! Received on Mon Jul 03 2006 - 14:10:57 CDT

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