Alpha Software Mobile Development Tools:   Alpha Anywhere    |   Alpha TransForm subscribe to our YouTube Channel  Follow Us on LinkedIn  Follow Us on Twitter  Follow Us on Facebook

Announcement

Collapse

The Alpha Software Forum Participation Guidelines

The Alpha Software Forum is a free forum created for Alpha Software Developer Community to ask for help, exchange ideas, and share solutions. Alpha Software strives to create an environment where all members of the community can feel safe to participate. In order to ensure the Alpha Software Forum is a place where all feel welcome, forum participants are expected to behave as follows:
  • Be professional in your conduct
  • Be kind to others
  • Be constructive when giving feedback
  • Be open to new ideas and suggestions
  • Stay on topic


Be sure all comments and threads you post are respectful. Posts that contain any of the following content will be considered a violation of your agreement as a member of the Alpha Software Forum Community and will be moderated:
  • Spam.
  • Vulgar language.
  • Quotes from private conversations without permission, including pricing and other sales related discussions.
  • Personal attacks, insults, or subtle put-downs.
  • Harassment, bullying, threatening, mocking, shaming, or deriding anyone.
  • Sexist, racist, homophobic, transphobic, ableist, or otherwise discriminatory jokes and language.
  • Sexually explicit or violent material, links, or language.
  • Pirated, hacked, or copyright-infringing material.
  • Encouraging of others to engage in the above behaviors.


If a thread or post is found to contain any of the content outlined above, a moderator may choose to take one of the following actions:
  • Remove the Post or Thread - the content is removed from the forum.
  • Place the User in Moderation - all posts and new threads must be approved by a moderator before they are posted.
  • Temporarily Ban the User - user is banned from forum for a period of time.
  • Permanently Ban the User - user is permanently banned from the forum.


Moderators may also rename posts and threads if they are too generic or do not property reflect the content.

Moderators may move threads if they have been posted in the incorrect forum.

Threads/Posts questioning specific moderator decisions or actions (such as "why was a user banned?") are not allowed and will be removed.

The owners of Alpha Software Corporation (Forum Owner) reserve the right to remove, edit, move, or close any thread for any reason; or ban any forum member without notice, reason, or explanation.

Community members are encouraged to click the "Report Post" icon in the lower left of a given post if they feel the post is in violation of the rules. This will alert the Moderators to take a look.

Alpha Software Corporation may amend the guidelines from time to time and may also vary the procedures it sets out where appropriate in a particular case. Your agreement to comply with the guidelines will be deemed agreement to any changes to it.



Bonus TIPS for Successful Posting

Try a Search First
It is highly recommended that a Search be done on your topic before posting, as many questions have been answered in prior posts. As with any search engine, the shorter the search term, the more "hits" will be returned, but the more specific the search term is, the greater the relevance of those "hits". Searching for "table" might well return every message on the board while "tablesum" would greatly restrict the number of messages returned.

When you do post
First, make sure you are posting your question in the correct forum. For example, if you post an issue regarding Desktop applications on the Mobile & Browser Applications board , not only will your question not be seen by the appropriate audience, it may also be removed or relocated.

The more detail you provide about your problem or question, the more likely someone is to understand your request and be able to help. A sample database with a minimum of records (and its support files, zipped together) will make it much easier to diagnose issues with your application. Screen shots of error messages are especially helpful.

When explaining how to reproduce your problem, please be as detailed as possible. Describe every step, click-by-click and keypress-by-keypress. Otherwise when others try to duplicate your problem, they may do something slightly different and end up with different results.

A note about attachments
You may only attach one file to each message. Attachment file size is limited to 2MB. If you need to include several files, you may do so by zipping them into a single archive.

If you forgot to attach your files to your post, please do NOT create a new thread. Instead, reply to your original message and attach the file there.

When attaching screen shots, it is best to attach an image file (.BMP, .JPG, .GIF, .PNG, etc.) or a zip file of several images, as opposed to a Word document containing the screen shots. Because Word documents are prone to viruses, many message board users will not open your Word file, therefore limiting their ability to help you.

Similarly, if you are uploading a zipped archive, you should simply create a .ZIP file and not a self-extracting .EXE as many users will not run your EXE file.
See more
See less

Using Sets and performance - design question

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Using Sets and performance - design question

    I am working on my A5 application. The db is relational and was designed around the concept of a master/parent table with all other tables being detail or child tables to the master/parent. Because of the way I designed the tables it would be possible to create a single set with the containing the parent and all the children. I could then reuse the single set for all my forms, reports, etc. However, I am now thinking this could create a performance problem and it may be better to have a number of smaller sets instead.

    I am wondering if anyone has any experience or thoughts on the matter. I am not certain how A5 handles the tables and sets under the hood, such as when the datasets are loaded with data, etc. Clearly I don't want to design poor performance into my application.

    If this has been answered before my apologies. I have tried to search the forums and the wiki but without success.

    Any advice is appreciated.
    Regards,

    John W.
    www.CustomReportWriters.net

    #2
    Re: Using Sets and performance - design question

    John, I was informed that the Data in the Set relationship was created when the set was opened, so I'd favour smaller sets on grounds of less complexity.
    Also, sets can be inverted to facilitate ease of reporting, and I have to admit that I have moved away from complicated sets EXCEPT where the view is a single view with no updates.
    Example.
    I have a social care process involving some 78 tables and 21 sets. It's too big to lump into one Set, however the approach I took for the most data to be displayed was to have 18 tables in a Set which can only be Viewed. The Form has Tabbed SubForms so it really does all fit on the page.
    Individual table elements are grouped intop smaller Sets for editing.
    Hope this helps.
    See our Hybrid Option here;
    https://hybridapps.example-software.com/


    Apologies to anyone I haven't managed to upset yet.
    You are held in a queue and I will get to you soon.

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Using Sets and performance - design question

      Thanks Ted!

      It reinforces my thinking that just because you can do something that does not make it the best choice. Even though my application at this point has only 13 tables, (a few more will need to be added) and 1 Set based on 2 tables that by going to a single one size fits all Set would over time create a performance issue. So I think I will add more sets each based on smaller numbers of tables.
      Regards,

      John W.
      www.CustomReportWriters.net

      Comment

      Working...
      X