Database Design Question

Started by Gonzo Rockover 24 years ago4 messagesgeneral
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#1Gonzo Rock
GonzoRock@Excite.com

A Question for those of you who consider yourself crack Database Designers.

I am currently moving a large database(100+Tables) into pgSQL... with the intention of deploying against 'any' SQL database in the future. The development side will be rigorously using Standard SQL constructs with no unique/proprietary extensions.

My question concerns establishing the relationships.

Currently Relationships between tables are established via a Unique Integer ID like this:

*=APrimaryKey

PartTypes Customer Parts
--------- -------- -----
PartTypeID CustomerID PartID
*PartType *Customer PartTypeID
Address CustomerID
*PartNumber(2FieldPrimaryKey)
*PartRevision(2FieldPrimaryKey)
PartName

HOWEVER; I have read lots of texts describing the Relational Design should be instead like this:

*=APrimaryKey

PartTypes Customer Parts
--------- -------- -----
*PartType *Customer PartType
Address *PartNumber(2FieldPrimaryKey)
*PartRevison(2FieldPrimaryKey)
PartName
Customer

Both Techniques have a unique foreign key back to the parent tables but one uses No.Meaningful.Info.Integer.Data for the ForeignKey while the second uses Human.Understandable.ForeignKeys

Is one recommended over the other??? Sure appreciate the commentary before I get in too deep with all these tables.

Thanks!

#2Andre Schnabel
a_schnabel@t-online.de
In reply to: Gonzo Rock (#1)
Re: Database Design Question

Don't really know, if I am a crack .. but ...

Your 1st Design would be faster when joining the tables in a query or view. Furthermore an index on the id's (should be integers, right?) would use much less storage space than an index on character-fields.

The 2nd design is preferred by theoretical purists. The data are much more selfexplaining. If you only have a Parts-record you can see to which Parttype an Costumer it belongs without qeurying the other tables. With your 1st design you had to.

I think it's a question of performance, storagespace and readability.
If you need high performace use the 1st Design.
If you need a design, readable by people who don't work day by day with it, use the 2nd method.

It's only my opinion, must not be right.

CU,
Andre
----- Original Message -----
From: Gonzo Rock
To: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Sent: Friday, July 27, 2001 8:03 PM
Subject: [GENERAL] Database Design Question

A Question for those of you who consider yourself crack Database Designers.

I am currently moving a large database(100+Tables) into pgSQL... with the intention of deploying against 'any' SQL database in the future. The development side will be rigorously using Standard SQL constructs with no unique/proprietary extensions.

My question concerns establishing the relationships.

Currently Relationships between tables are established via a Unique Integer ID like this:

*=APrimaryKey

PartTypes Customer Parts
--------- -------- -----
PartTypeID CustomerID PartID
*PartType *Customer PartTypeID
Address CustomerID
*PartNumber(2FieldPrimaryKey)
*PartRevision(2FieldPrimaryKey)
PartName

HOWEVER; I have read lots of texts describing the Relational Design should be instead like this:

*=APrimaryKey

PartTypes Customer Parts
--------- -------- -----
*PartType *Customer PartType
Address *PartNumber(2FieldPrimaryKey)
*PartRevison(2FieldPrimaryKey)
PartName
Customer

Both Techniques have a unique foreign key back to the parent tables but one uses No.Meaningful.Info.Integer.Data for the ForeignKey while the second uses Human.Understandable.ForeignKeys

Is one recommended over the other??? Sure appreciate the commentary before I get in too deep with all these tables.

Thanks!

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#3Brent R. Matzelle
bmatzelle@yahoo.com
In reply to: Andre Schnabel (#2)
PostgreSQL to Dia program

Someone just posted a PostgreSQL to Dia automatic diagram
creation tool. I have not tested it, but if it works it could
be a huge help.

http://www.zort.ca/postgresql/

Justin, this could definately be a techdocs link.

Brent

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#4Justin Clift
justin@postgresql.org
In reply to: Brent R. Matzelle (#3)
Re: PostgreSQL to Dia program

Hi Brent,

Thanks for this! I'll put it on my ToDo list for adding.

Good thing I came across your email, about 2/3 to 3/4 of all the
pgsql-general emails I never even get time to read. :(

If you REALLY want to make sure I read something, please CC it to me of
course!

:-)

Regards and best wishes,

Justin Clift

"Brent R. Matzelle" wrote:

Someone just posted a PostgreSQL to Dia automatic diagram
creation tool. I have not tested it, but if it works it could
be a huge help.

http://www.zort.ca/postgresql/

Justin, this could definately be a techdocs link.

Brent

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Make international calls for as low as $.04/minute with Yahoo! Messenger
http://phonecard.yahoo.com/

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