I'm trying to start with NoSQL database and so started a simple dictionary project to train.
I am working on Amazon Web Services DynamoDB.
My dictionary needs to store words with their language, and their translations. So in SQL I would have two tables, one for the words, one for the mapping of translations.
1. Many to many
According to Amazon's video (here), to do a N to M relationship, we just need to create a table with a composite primary key :
- Partition key : the word
- Sort key : its translation
And a secondary index which PK and SK the table are swapped :
- Parition key : the sort key of the table (the translation)
- Sort key : partition key of the table (the word)
It makes sense.
2. Composite primary key
My words have a language, and it need to take part in the primary key, otherwise I will have collisions when the user enters a word that exists in two languages. So my word table primary key looks like this :
- Parition key : language
- Sort key : word
3. And... The problem
Now, I want to apply the N-to-M mapping strategy (1) with my table (2) ; and here is my problem, my table has a composite key. So I need to be able to "merge" my pair lang/word and I don't have a good feeling about that:
- Use a concatenation of language and word is a solution, but I don't think it's Ok for the partition key (sort key yes according to the video)
- Abandon the translation table and put all the translations in an array as a third field of the word table. This imply that I duplicate everything and that my queries will be OK in only one direction.
- Create one table per combination of languages, which doesn't sounds very beautiful too.
So now I think I obviously missed something with NoSQL, or that my scheme is wrong somewhere. Just need a fresh eye to spot my mistakes :)