Le samedi 12 octobre 2013 à 12:19 -0700, Chuck Davis a écrit : > Just for an example: If you have 500 clients placing one order a > browser is an "ok" tool -- probably the tool of choice. If you have > one accounts payable clerk entering 500 orders a browser is a very > mean thing to do the your employee unless the entry is simply making > selections from a drop down populated from the database; that scenario > is not too real-worldish for AP. > Hi Chuck, Could you explain the acronym AP? I understand that there are lots of situations I have not met yet, so this might explain my ignorance, but I don't see what you get from using a client-side app over a browser for most databases uses; after all, from the user's point of view, it's always tabbing from one field to the next (providing the web form is correctly designed, of course) Also, I would think most data in the form _should_ come from dropdowns populated from the database, for obvious reasons of data integrity? It certainly is the case in my apps. -- Salutations, Vincent Veyron http://marica.fr/site/demonstration Gestion des contentieux juridiques, des contrats et des sinistres d'assurance -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general