With the advancement of technology and the relative decrease in cost, more and more patients are seeking the use of laparoscopy to remove the appendix or repair a hernia. In the clinic, patients often ask if they can use a minimally invasive approach, that is, they seek a laparoscopic approach. Nowadays, even major surgery such as stomach cancer and rectal cancer can be done using laparoscopy, and it is certainly not a problem to do appendiceal hernia. However, some people think that laparoscopy for appendix and hernia is a big deal, and that the total length of a wound with three holes is about the same as making a small incision. Others say that laparoscopy is not clean, or that a lot of blood will come out. In fact, this is all because they do not understand laparoscopic surgery. First of all, laparoscopic surgery is done with a very small poke hole, usually one centimeter for the entry hole and five millimeters for the operation hole. Appendiceal hernia surgery usually requires one entry hole and two operating holes, which add up to two centimeters. An open surgery, on the other hand, requires a minimum of five centimeters. The postoperative pain is completely different. Patients who have undergone laparoscopic surgery will report that poking the hole is basically painless, while patients who have open surgery will still feel pain for the first day or two. The laparoscopic view is very wide, and in addition to local surgery it can also explore the whole abdominal cavity and find occult lesions. There is almost no disturbance to the intestinal canal, so the recovery of bowel function after surgery is very fast. Basically, there is no postoperative dietary restriction. Laparoscopic surgery also allows thorough flushing of the abdominopelvic cavity to avoid postoperative abdominal abscesses. Again, because all operations are done within the trocar, wound infection is almost impossible. Incisional hernias also rarely occur. Laparoscopic surgery is a very delicate operation and almost no bleeding occurs. If bleeding occurs, laparoscopic surgery will not be completed and an intermediate open abdomen is necessary, so it is illogical to say that laparoscopic surgery bleeds a lot. There are also people who say that laparoscopic surgery does not cut cleanly, which is even more nonsense. Laparoscopic surgery is only a change of tools, the essence of the surgery has not changed, but because of the mirror magnification of the laparoscope, so that the operator can see more clearly, more detailed anatomy, more clean removal.