I'd be grateful if someone could advise me what the correct way is to approach this:
- I have a parent table, with primary key
master_id
. - I have five child tables associated with the master_id, in a 1-to-n relationship, that record semantically different types of data (and wouldn't lend themselves to abstraction)
- The only common fields in each child table are
master-id
(foreign key),created_by
(user_id),created_time
(timestamp).
The aim is to publish each child row associated with a master id in a chronological order on a webpage (imagine a forum posts style display), with the PHP building each "post" (i.e. row) slightly differently depending on the child table (and hence fields of data available to it).
Am I right in thinking there's no easy way to query this regardless of the table structure (and that ordering would be best done in PHP)? Is there any advantage to vertically partitioning out the 3 common fields into a single table combined with a table
field?
UNION
subquery, ordering the combined results in the parent query. You may have to insert extra columns into each query so that the resultsets align. See this answer for more information.