Re: Tool support for PL/SQL?
From: DA Morgan <damorgan_at_x.washington.edu>
Date: Thu, 21 Oct 2004 18:18:28 -0700
Message-ID: <1098407855.289582_at_yasure>
>>Hello, I'm doing some research with U.C. Davis into semantic checking
>>for PL/SQL, and I'm wondering how various DBA's actually code their
>>PL/SQL. I'm not all that familiar with the current state of the art
>>regarding tool support for programming PL/SQL, and am curious as to
>>how you all write it. (i.e. Directly in an Oracle shell, in a text
>>editor, in some specific PL/SQL environment, etc)
>>
>>Any descriptions of how you write PL/SQL and gripes about lack of tool
>>support or praise of a tool would be helpful.
>>
>>Thanks!
>>~Carl Gould
>>crgould -AT- ucdavis -DOT- edu
Date: Thu, 21 Oct 2004 18:18:28 -0700
Message-ID: <1098407855.289582_at_yasure>
Tim Arnold wrote:
> "Carl G" <crgould_at_ucdavis.edu> wrote in message > news:k8a9n097f1mup0pveea4r2n9sj82fn8pkf_at_4ax.com... >
>>Hello, I'm doing some research with U.C. Davis into semantic checking
>>for PL/SQL, and I'm wondering how various DBA's actually code their
>>PL/SQL. I'm not all that familiar with the current state of the art
>>regarding tool support for programming PL/SQL, and am curious as to
>>how you all write it. (i.e. Directly in an Oracle shell, in a text
>>editor, in some specific PL/SQL environment, etc)
>>
>>Any descriptions of how you write PL/SQL and gripes about lack of tool
>>support or praise of a tool would be helpful.
>>
>>Thanks!
>>~Carl Gould
>>crgould -AT- ucdavis -DOT- edu
> > > I like Oratool from MAXdbt. I've been using a demo for years, which was > free.
For years? Then please feel a little sense of guilt or conscience and send the authors a check.
-- Daniel A. Morgan University of Washington damorgan_at_x.washington.edu (replace 'x' with 'u' to respond)Received on Fri Oct 22 2004 - 03:18:28 CEST