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I have a table successfully created in MySQL:

CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS MESSAGE
(
    MESSAGE_ID          BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT      
    ,AUTHOR_ID          VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL
    ,TITLE              VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL
    ,MESSAGE            VARCHAR(4095) NOT NULL
    ,UNREAD_FLAG            BOOLEAN NOT NULL DEFAULT TRUE                   
    ,CREATION_DATE          TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
    ,DATE_LAST_MODIFIED     TIMESTAMP NULL

    ,PRIMARY KEY (MESSAGE_ID)
    ,FOREIGN KEY (AUTHOR_ID) REFERENCES USER (USR_ID)
);

As you can see, there is no references to who receives the message(s) for the reason that 1 or more recipients can receive the same message.

  1. How would I implement a message-threading "model" such that if there's a message that is sent to more than 1 user, the recipients can reply to the message and keep track on what message the recipient replied to? E.g. I've send a message to 5 friends about a party, and they all reply, how will I keep records on the response message link to the original message? Also, a recipient can also respond to a responded message, creating a response to a responded message, so eventually, it'll be a tree like structure of responded message.

  2. How can I create a table to have more than 1 recipient receiving the same message? I had an idea of creating a table with recipient_id (reference to user table) and message_id (message id) pair. Is that efficient? The reason I ask is that if 200 people receive the same message, then there'll be 200 tables of user_id, message_id pair...

P.S. I've implemented number 2), so I guess that's not going to be an issue.

1 Answer 1

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  1. I don't understand your question here.

  2. Your idea is the normal way to do this. You'd set up a table with recipient_id and message_id and run queries against it to determine (for instance) what messages a particular user has. You might also need to store additional data in this table like whether the user has read the message, etc., depending on the needs of your app.

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  • For number 2, I did already that...thanks..I'm more worried about question 1. Notice that I've re-updated the question. Jan 21, 2010 at 19:29
  • I would just add another column to your message table to track the response_to_id, which will be a foreign key back to message_id but can be null. If someone responds to message #123, their new message has its response_to_id set to 123. You can trace links back that way for responses to response and so on.
    – eliah
    Jan 21, 2010 at 19:35
  • ok, will null foreign key be allowed? and does that make my table normalized? Jan 21, 2010 at 19:46
  • Having nulls should be no problem. I do this in MySQL DBs all the time. I don't know about normalization, though; DB theory is not my forte.
    – eliah
    Jan 21, 2010 at 19:49

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