On 12/16/21 11:22, Bryn Llewellyn wrote:
Folks who develop applications for Oracle Database have had the features that the subject line of this email lists since the arrival of PL/SQL in the early nineties. The advantages are self-evident to these programmers; and their lack comes as a shocking disappointment when they start to write application code for PostgreSQL*. The absence of packages and inner subprograms is huge. The absence of parameterizable anonymous blocks is a smaller limitation. Notice that this point is entirely separable from the endeavor of migrating an extant application. It has first and foremost to do with how you think of designing code. I’ve heard rumors that some contributors to the PostgreSQL implementation are interested in bringing the PL/pgSQL features that I mentioned. If there is any such thinking, please let me know. I’m not a C coder but I’d be very interested in reader any ordinary prose that describes how these features might be exposed to the PostgreSQL application developer.
Not following. To be exposed they have to exist and that is not the case in the community Postgres. The relevant question would seem to be, how do I get these features built?
________________________________________________________________________________ * Full disclosure: I was the product manager for PL/SQL, working at Oracle HQ, from about 2000 through 2019 when I started with Yugabyte, Inc. At least some people on this list have heard of YugabyteDB and know that it uses Postgres’s SQL processing code “as is” (currently Version 11.2, but presently Version 13) on top of its own implementation of a distributed storage layer (inspired by Google Spanner).
-- Adrian Klaver adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx