@TimStone the link makes it seem that there is a magical Oracle function that only needs one pass (a tablescan that is) to get the %, which is value/sum(values) ... sum(values) requires a full pass, then doing each row is another full pass on the table ~~ two passes.
> but is less efficient than an analytic function that does one full table scan rather than two
How does the operation get away with one tablescan rather than two? Or did I miss something? The CTE in the answer I commented under is the way I would do it, and the most efficient way I know of
additionally I would expect the SQL compiler to optimize value/sum(values) to a CTE-like query without me having to specify it, since that's a jitterable optimization in my understanding
That may be what it does, build a resultset in a temptable and then return the value off the temptable, but it implies only a single pass, which as far as I can tell mathematically is impossible.
I would love to know that there was deep set black magic that would allow that to be bypassed. That would be wizardry of the nth degree awesome
So anyways, we have like ZERO motivation in the US to seriously speak more than one language, and only trick most youth into trying it by either having them live near Mexico or Canada, or else requiring it in school. The fact that most Canadians and Mexicans (near the borders at least) speak English makes that trick next to useless
I wish I could speak the three languages I pretend to with fluency. I'm rather jealous.
I am looking at rolling out a CMS system that will require the creation of around 10,000 tables within the primary MySQL database of the system.
The database will be the data store for several hundred small website front ends that might draw a modest load of around 150k unique viewers per month,...
Ok, I've been here for 150 minutes and have gotten so far as to load my various IDEs ... and answer some dba.SE questions. Guess I should go put in some work for a bit this afternoon huh?
No idea. It's just that when I looked at the /users page I noticed that there were 9000 sub pages - now there are 9010. That's 10 new sub pages added today at 35 users per sub page.
Is there any benefit to referring new users to SE sites other than the warm fuzzy feeling you get for making the Internet a slightly better place? I'm not trivializing that feeling, I'm just not sure if there are other rewards.