I’m sure there is a time and place for it (Power Apps is a billion dollar business), like time keeping frontend logic. Apps with significant logic and complexity will always need developers.
I’m not critical of your app as I have no real understanding of what it does and why the design choices were made. I do not think embedding logic in SQL would be an ideal way for any app I’ve worked on to work.
Not exactly. We still have shitloads of code. It has just been modularized & standardized such that each component can now mostly be configured by SQL the business writes.
Our product is a B2B application, and each one of our customers has very precise & unique business rules they would like to see applied.
Every customer uses the same code pile, but with varying configuration (SQL).
I’m sure there is a time and place for it (Power Apps is a billion dollar business), like time keeping frontend logic. Apps with significant logic and complexity will always need developers.
I’m not critical of your app as I have no real understanding of what it does and why the design choices were made. I do not think embedding logic in SQL would be an ideal way for any app I’ve worked on to work.