minty
minty

Reputation: 22421

What do you use to write and edit stored procedures in Oracle?

There are many options for editing and writing Stored Procedures in Oracle; what is the best tool for you and why? (one tool per answer.)

Upvotes: 3

Views: 9921

Answers (24)

geekzspot
geekzspot

Reputation: 875

SQL Developer from Oracle

We have replaced all other tools at our (large well known) enterprise that has over 150 databases and it works just fine. It's not as good as TOAD but it is getting there, and (unlike TOAD) it's free.

SQL Developer also works well enough connecting to SQL Server

Upvotes: 0

user78706
user78706

Reputation:

I use Textpad, Clipmate and Quest SQLNavigator. The newer versions of Quest's SQLNavigator and TOAD are crap -- they tend to crash easily and don't play nice with XP/Vista/Win7.

I've spent hours with their tech support and they don't have alternatives.
You get no access to Quest programmers, but rather you get bogged down in their
trouble ticket process.

Quest needs to focus less on integration of different tools into one and selling you
promises that the next version will solve the instability issues.

They need stability.
This means cleaning up their existing codebase or starting over.
More competent programmers, fewer salespeople, fewer tech support people.
Fix the damn problems.
They focus on sales and it's an idiotic business strategy.
This seems to be a problem across the industry.

Quest's TOAD and SQL Navigator have become bloatware and will soon become abandonware
if they don't turn them around and make them more stable.

I copy and paste frequently between Textpad and Quest SQLNavigator because SQLNavigator
crashes and I lose all my sql code up to the point of crash.

I'll probably dump SQLNavigator once I find something more stable.

Upvotes: 0

Cshah
Cshah

Reputation: 5850

For me its, Oracle SQL Developer. The learning curve is very minimal if you have worked on IDEs like Eclipse or VS. You can set break points, read live values when you debug stored procs as you would do to code in eclipse/VS. Ofcourse the UI is a bit sluggish at times but given that its free compensates the sluggishness.

Upvotes: 0

Kuberchaun
Kuberchaun

Reputation: 30342

I always use PL/SQL Developer from Allround Automations.

http://www.allroundautomations.com/plsqldev.html

Upvotes: 2

Tony Andrews
Tony Andrews

Reputation:

A really good text editor with syntax highlighting (e.g. Textpad from www.textpad.com) and SQL Plus.

Upvotes: 0

arturh
arturh

Reputation: 6106

I recently found the free Oracle SQL Developer.

  • nice looking GUI (makes you not poke out your eyes like the usual Oracle tools)
  • has many nice features, like showing tables filtered
  • lets you connect to multiple oracle instances at once
  • you can use sane configuration like ip:port username/password and do not have to use those strange TNSNAMES.ORA file based settings
  • you can set breakpoints and step through the code of stored procedures.

Upvotes: 8

Andrew
Andrew

Reputation: 13221

Toolset for Oracle (TOra) is a free, Open Source Database Tool very similar in scope (and look and feel) to Quest's TOAD

Compared to the freeware edition of TOAD, TOra allows multiple connections to different database instances at the same time, and has no concurrent connection limit (so any number of TOra users can be working on the same database instance)

Upvotes: 1

Shelley
Shelley

Reputation:

I use TOAD with our Oracle reports development, and I think that it's a good development tool. I normally toggle back and forth between a number of different Oracle instances and schemae, and I like the way that TOAD can display multiple windows for each instance/schema, or even more than one per schema.

TOAD takes a little while to learn and customize, but it's a worthwhile investment. The layout is similar to the Visual Studio .NET IDE with sidebars that can be anchored or rolled away. Tabs display different aspects of the Oracle schema, including procedures, jobs, stats, etc. And when I'm writing SQL, the editor uses color-coding and the error messages are Oracle-specific.

Upvotes: 1

ropable
ropable

Reputation: 1589

Use Oracle's own SQL Developer. If you are mainly working with Oracle, it does everything you'll need.

Upvotes: 1

user14308
user14308

Reputation: 61

Yet another vote for Oracle SQl Developer. But TOAD works too.

Upvotes: 0

dummy
dummy

Reputation: 4284

With the mentioned SQL Developer you can even set breakpoints and step through the code of the stored procedure.

Upvotes: 0

CJM
CJM

Reputation: 12016

Another vote for Oracle SQL Developer. It's free, it's stable and it does all the basics that I require.

Upvotes: 0

Mike Desjardins
Mike Desjardins

Reputation: 460

I've used RapidSQL by Embarcadero on several different DB platforms, and it's awesome. It has an integrated step debugger, too. I haven't actually used it with Oracle, but I know it's supported.

Upvotes: 0

user11937
user11937

Reputation:

I use Oracle SQL Developer - the latest version also has support for CVS and Subversion.

It has the bonus of supporting other database providers, too.

I have used this tool for 2 years and it has now settled down to be reliable.

Upvotes: 0

Dmitry Baranov
Dmitry Baranov

Reputation:

As a professional PL/SQL developer I use (heh) PL/SQL Developer from Allaround Automations. I've worked with TOAD for quite a long time but now it is quite overpriced comparing with PL/SQL dev. It has some advantages like knowledge base or ability to work with other RDBMS like SQL server but that's not a necessity for me.

But Notepad++ will always help to make occasional fix.

Upvotes: 2

John_D
John_D

Reputation: 128

PL/SQL Developer from Allaround Automations.

I happily paid the $200 or so price for this.

Excellent IDE (+ good Intellisense, + debugging capability) with easy creation and editing of PL/SQL packages, SPs, Triggers etc

So much better than Toad.

Upvotes: 4

Rob Paterson
Rob Paterson

Reputation: 2593

I use JetBrains IDEA (a Java IDE) to edit and SQL*Plus to execute. The advantages of using a tool with local version control, seemless integration into Source Version Control, advanced find and highlighting, great editing, 'live templates' and so on for me outweighs any advantage of having it 'database aware' (which with plug-ins you can get anyway). If I was coding up a complicated query I might fire up SQL Developer, but generally I prefer great text editing features.

Upvotes: 0

Sébastien D.
Sébastien D.

Reputation: 9

Notepad++ stays my favourite editor. I had to use SQL Developer in the past, it's not so "bad", but I encountered many problems with it. It proved very unstable so I wouldn't recommend it, or maybe only to test your procedures.

Upvotes: 0

Andrew
Andrew

Reputation: 13221

Tool for Oracle Application Developers (TOAD), from Quest Software (formerly TOADSoft) has an excellent Stored Procedure editor with syntax highlighting, some autocomplete support (e.g. type in 'TABLE.' and the columns will appear), a nice Execute Procedure option that will show the results in a Grid or show DBMS output, and will also focus on syntax errors when you hit compile.

Note: The Freeware edition only allows 2 concurrent connections to the same Database Instance (even though the website says 5) - that means only 2 developers or DBA's can use it at the same time on the same Database. It also expires every 3 months but they're good at releasing updates.

Upvotes: 11

Johan Danforth
Johan Danforth

Reputation: 4589

Toad, from ToadSoft.com -> http://www.toadsoft.com/toad_oracle.htm

For someone like me who likes to work with a DBA tool like Microsoft's SQL Management Studio, it's a life saver.

Upvotes: 3

Chris Kimpton
Chris Kimpton

Reputation: 5541

But some at our place swear by Toad

Upvotes: 1

Chris Kimpton
Chris Kimpton

Reputation: 5541

I like Rapid SQL, you can debug SQL too

Upvotes: 0

fuentesjr
fuentesjr

Reputation: 52348

I like SQL Developer from Oracle. Oh and its free! :)

Upvotes: 0

user9706
user9706

Reputation:

I just used a standard editor (vim which then gave me syntax highlighting).

/Allan

Upvotes: 0

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