MySQL RANT was: PVR or DVR for Linux - NOT MythTV
John Chambers
jc-8FIgwK2HfyJMuWfdjsoA/w at public.gmane.org
Thu Jun 7 14:34:54 EDT 2007
Kristian Hermansen commented:
| I could go on and on about software developers who ignore the nature of
| databases. It drives me crazy. You wouldn't put up with a developer who
| didn't understand or know the language they were developing in, why do
| people put up with ignorance about databases if your application uses
| them?
|
| I can categorically say that *any* software developer that chooses MySQL
| without a very specific reason should be fired. The "good enough" excuse
| is laziness.
Hmm ... Using the same approach, I might say that any software
developer that writes a shell script rather than a "real" scripting
language like perl or python is lazy. But I'd have to admit that I
write simple shell scripts all the time. Granted, when they get to 10
or 12 lines, I usually start thinking "This would be better in p*"
and add the punctuation chars to turn it into the more powerful
language.
Larry Wall has pointed out that laziness is one of the attributes of
a good programmer, and used this as a primary argument for perl. Why
do something the hard way when there's a tool that lets you do it in
a simpler way? The fact that a tool isn't general purpose and doesn't
do a lot of other jobs isn't actually a very good argument if you're
trying to get one job done with a minimum of human effort.
I mean, I know C well enough that I haven't consulted a C manual for
a couple of decades, but I don't write much my software in C. Most of
the time, I use more complex languages like perl, or simpler
languages like the Bourne (again;-) shell. And sometimes I need to
hit a problem with a powerful language that makes low-level bit
twiddling easy, so I use C.
This seems to be the heart of the argument for mySQL. Not that it's a
good tool for everything. Just that it's good enough for a lot of
things, and when it isn't, you can use something else.
Of course, to do this with languages or databases or any tool, you
have to be familiar with a few something elses ...
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