that way, domain objects, have no notion / representation of the physical data structure that they are stored on, and in fact allow structure changes without changing business logic, just the dao
yes - more code but on a high volume system, you need the control on the SQL anyway
When you start representing them as different objects / exposed individually, you are in effect letting the physical DB structure implementation bleed across interface boundaries
I get what you're saying ... so if I have an invoice ... I should / perhaps could ... store that as a single row ... but on the api expose it as a parent with children
from a logical model perspective, they are part of the same object, the fact we store them relationally across multiple tables is a physical storage thing, it has nothing to do with the domain modelling
An invoice has multiple attributes, some of which are not singular, but lists
yeh so in the API layer for invoices ... the defnition of a line item is known as part of the model ... but you can only get lines by asking for an invoice with it's lines
now - one size doesn't fit all here, and I'm not wanting to be prescriptive, but this is where different disciplines, data architects / DB architects / software architects end up in a tug of war
I can see there being a need to store things differently to the business logic ... but structurally ... weather you talk about logical or physical it's still the same raw data
2.^ Jump up to: a b Evans, Eric (2004). Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-032-112521-7. Retrieved August 12, 2012..
I don't put much stock in enforcing patterns like that rigidly only in a stack being consistent with itself
if I was to describe my code it I would say its "a bit of badly implemented everything from every popular pattern but in small enough pieces that they fit nicely where they should"
so I have for example ... an anemic object domain ... but they are smart enough to know things like ... Given an invoice I can ask an invoice invoice.Approve(user) ... so given a user the invoice can determine if that user can approve it and then if so apply it's own internal changes
That's why I'll not be prescriptive but can describe the thinking I might do / implement, but I'm not going to say everyone should do X, where X is some technique that is technique de jour which is being pushed with zeal.
I'm out for the day, I have to fix a piece of shit website that sets permissions every time it reloads and retrieves them from the view with every new page.
And returns "Unknown" as a plain text string if it fails to find anything.
People are complaining why they get "unknown" when they enter a wrong user/pw combination, the developer who made it claims it's pretty normal, and a user should never fail to log in, that's their problem.
Has anyone had to work with Citadel 4 database? I am trying to figure out a way to import it in to a SQL database using SSIS package but the ODBCdriver seems to erroring out. But at the same time I can query Citadel 4 database from Microsoft Query program that comes with office and import it into excel using that driver.
I am looking for a free, easy-to-script Postgres GUI client that isn't pgAdmin. I saw TeamSQL, but literally all reddit posts on the tool was questionable promotional posts. Is there an open-source gui tool that marries nicely with the open-source postgres?