On 2024-07-10 06:28:46 +0530, Krishnakant Mane wrote: > I have a straight forward question, but I am just trying to analyze the > specifics. > > So I have a set of queries depending on each other in a sequence to compute > some results for generating financial report. I am assuming that you aren't creating hundreds of financial reports per second. So you care about performance because each report takes significant time (seconds, maybe even minutes). Right? > It involves summing up some amounts from tuns or of rows and also on certain > conditions it categorizes the amounts into types (aka Debit Balance, Credit > balance etc). > > There are at least 6 queries in this sequence and apart from 4 input > parameters. these queries never change. > > So will I get any performance benefit by having them in a stored procedure > rather than sending the queries from my Python based API? For just 6 queries I doubt that. You will save one round trip per query, but that should only be a few milliseconds unless your database is on the other side of the planet. You might also get some performance improvement if your queries are returning a significant amount of data which is only needed for constructing further queries but doesn't enter the final report. In this case keeping it in the database might be quite a bit faster than transferring it back and forth between the database and the client. OTOH, temporary tables or CTEs might be sufficient for that. hp -- _ | Peter J. Holzer | Story must make more sense than reality. |_|_) | | | | | hjp@xxxxxx | -- Charles Stross, "Creative writing __/ | http://www.hjp.at/ | challenge!"
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