Greg,
What is your DBA's aversion to creating another table or two? Oracle databases exist to store tables to solve business problems. If someone prevents the creation of tables necessary to solve business problems, then it seems to me that "The Inhibitor" is preventing the solution of business problems, true or false?
My analysis for the creation of a data object is:
1) What are the risks of creating the object?
2) How can we manage those risks?
3) What are the business risks of
not creating the object?
4) What are the explicit and implicit costs of creating the object?
5) What are the explicit and implicit returns/benefits/competitive advantages of creating the object?
6) Do the net benefits outweight the costs of the above items?
If the answer is "yes", then the decision is clear.
Has your DBA (or someone higher up, with a clearer vision of business costs/benefits) done the above analysis?
![[santa] [santa] [santa]](/data/assets/smilies/santa.gif)
Mufasa
(aka Dave of Sandy, Utah, USA)
[I provide low-cost, remote Database Administration services:
www.dasages.com]