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>>>> So, you claim it is easier to force the user to know about Arrays,
Sets,
>>>> Bags, Collections, Iterators, Children, Parents etc. than it is to
force
the
>>>> user to know about Relations, Tuples and Domains?
>>>
>>>All of the above constructs are part of the Java programming language.
>>
>> So, your concept of a DBMS limits the user community to a very select
group
>> of highly trained programmers?
>
>The advantage of Java is, that Java programmers need not to be "highly
trained".
>It's not APL, it's even much easier than C(no memory management :-).
Believe me, the average business analyst with a commerce degree will find Java totally inaccessible -- even with training. The point is: a relational language that exposes only relations consisting of tuples of values is much easier to learn.
>>>We
>>>neither force the user to know about them, nor to use them.
>>
>> So, as long as your force all of your users to first learn Java, you are
off
>> the hook?
>
>Not users, programmers.
In other words, the only users allowed are programmers, which takes me back to my earlier statement: Carl's concept of a DBMS limits the user community to a very select group of highly trained programmers.
>I agree that language-specificity, can be
>disadvantageous in some cases... but advantageous in others.
In a DBMS, the purpose of which is to satisfy the needs of all users and all applications, programming language specificity is always disadvantageous.
Cheers,
Bob
Received on Sat Jul 21 2001 - 18:29:11 CDT
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