Hello from a Filemaker renegade
    Geoff Canyon 
    gcanyon at inspiredlogic.com
       
    Fri Apr  9 20:55:09 EDT 2004
    
    
  
On Apr 8, 2004, at 10:55 PM, Bruce Robertson wrote:
>> well multiple users accessing a database in a single tier enviroment
>> are realy matter of the RDBMS, if you settle for multi-tier then it's
>> easy to program it's logic.
>
> That's really not much of an answer, and that is one thing that 
> continues to
> strike me about Rev database access discussions. They seem quite 
> shallow and
> unrealistic.
I think you're being unfair to Andre here. Revolution is an 
application-building tool that has robust database access. FileMaker is 
a database-building tool that has limited application-building 
capabilities.
As such, of course every aspect of database access is built-in to 
FileMaker, and any reasonably skilled FileMaker developer is going to 
be able to answer them in the context of FileMaker.
With Revolution, on the other hand, there are a thousand different ways 
you could put together "a database application." People here have 
outlined many of them. Many questions that would be relevant in a 
discussion of developing database applications with FileMaker are a 
matter of the database engine: record-locking, relation setup, 
triggers, stored procedures, atomicity, consistency, isolation, 
durability, etc.
Revolution makes the front end, and all the interactivity therein. So 
your questions need to be divided into two categories: those that are 
appropriate on this list, and those that may be appropriate on this 
list, but might also belong on the MySQL, PostgreSQL... list.
I think you'll get a much better answer if you ask a question like this:
I have a fifteen-user FileMaker Pro database that uses instant web 
publishing to allow casual users access when they're out of the office. 
I want to create something similar using MySQL as a back end and I'm 
considering Revolution as a front end. What issues do I need to be 
aware of when deciding whether to use Rev or not?
regards,
Geoff Canyon
gcanyon at inspiredlogic.com
    
    
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