I think the point they were trying to make is for using ORM for everything until you need a query complex enough or performant enough to drop back to a raw SQL layer.
That's the pattern I've seen the most with ORM setups these days. That or dropping performance heavy sql into stored procedures but in the end it's all a matrix of ease of use/maintainability in some scenarios vs full control and performance tuning and what makes sense for that use case.
That's the pattern I've seen the most with ORM setups these days. That or dropping performance heavy sql into stored procedures but in the end it's all a matrix of ease of use/maintainability in some scenarios vs full control and performance tuning and what makes sense for that use case.