Re: sql schema advice sought

From: Jaime Silvela <JSilvela(at)Bear(dot)com>
To: Jonathan Vanasco <postgres(at)2xlp(dot)com>
Cc: pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: sql schema advice sought
Date: 2007-04-03 13:56:17
Message-ID: 46125D01.400@bear.com
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I have a similar situation. Here's what I do.

I have a stand-alone comment table:
Comments
id
timestamp
text

Then I have individual product tables to tie a table to a comment:
Table_A_Comment
id
id_ref_a references tableA
id_comment references Comments

The Table_*_Comment tables can be unified into one, of course:
Table_Comment
id
id_comment references Comments
id_ref_a references tableA
id_ref_b references tableB
id_ref_c references tableC

In my view, the advantage is that you keep concepts separate: the
structure of comments does not depend on the tables it comments.
Also, the product table/s give you more flexibility if, say, you decide
a comment can apply to more than one object.

Jonathan Vanasco wrote:
> I'm redoing a sql schema , and looking for some input
>
> First I had 2 tables :
> Table_A
> id
> name
> a
> b
> c
> Table_B
> id
> name
> x
> y
> z
>
> as the project grew, so did functionality.
>
> Table_A_Comments
> id
> id_refd references Table_A(id)
> timestamp
> text
> Table_B_Comments
> id
> id_refd references Table_B(id)
> timestamp
> text
>
> well, it just grew again
>
> Table_C
> id
> name
> m
> n
> o
> Table_C_Comments
> id
> id_refd references Table_B(id)
> timestamp
> text
>
> Now:
> Table_A , Table_B , and Table_C are all quite different.
> But:
> Table_A_Comments , Table_B_Comments , Table_C_Comments are
> essentially the same -- except that they fkey on different tables.
>
> I could keep 3 sep. tables for comments, but I'd really like to
> consolidate them in the db -- it'll be easier to reference the data in
> the webapps that query it .
>
> My problem is that I can't figure out a way to do this cleanly , while
> retain integrity.
>
> When dealing with this In the past, I used a GUID table
> Table_ABC_guid
> guid , child_type [ A , B, C ] , child_id
> and then add a guid column onto each table that FKEYS it.
>
> On instantiation of a new row in A, B, C I would create a GUID
> record and then update the row with it. general tables would ref the
> guid, not the real table.
>
> I can't help but feel thats still a dirty hack, and there's a better
> way. That didn't solve my integrity problems, it just shifted them
> into a more manageable place.
>
> Anyone have a suggestion ?
>
>
>
>
>
> ---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
> TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
>

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