vote up 1 vote down star

A SQL VIEW is a global, logical table that may or may not be persisted. But it's still a table. Therefore, should a VIEW always adhere to first normal form (1NF)? i.e. no duplicate rows, scalar types only, no top-to-bottom or left-to-right ordering, etc. What about the higher normal forms?

For me, my applications 'consume' the results of stored procs, my VIEWs are 'consumed' by SQL queries, and these two usages are mutually exclusive (i.e. I don’t query the resultsets of stored procs using SQL and my applications do not contain SQL code). I've seen others use a VIEW to 'concatenate' multiple values in a column into a single row, usually comma-separated format. Writing predicates in a SQL query against such a column requires a kludges similar to this:

',' + concat_col + ',' LIKE '%' + ',' + search_value + ',' + '%'

So it seems to me reasonable to expect all tables that can be queried to consist of only scalar types. Am I being too 'purist' by thinking this?

flag

80% accept rate

5 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

No - I create views to match the output that my program requires.

link|flag
My VIEWs are 'consumed' by SQL queries only. If my program needs a resultset in a 'special' format then I would either do this in a stored proc or the middle tier. I'm not suggesting the output of every stored proc should be in 1NF, only output that is in the form of a table (and I guess that would include table variables where applicable). – onedaywhen Jun 26 at 14:11
You've obviously created rules for your own application (no SQL in clients, e.g.) which work for you. They are more restrictive that what I would consider to be best practices, but the nice thing about being too restrictive is that it's always easy to change your mind later and be more relaxed - not so easy to go the other way. But generally, the output of views can violate 1NF (although dupe rows are useless, AFAIK). In fact, using ugly views is one of the best ways of migrating an ugly design to a clean design - you need the views to support legacy clients until they too, can be fixed. – Steve Broberg Jun 26 at 14:48
vote up 2 vote down

The whole point of relational systems is that you keep data in normalized relations for efficiency and / or manageability, and then use the relational operators to convert them into the relations you need.

A non-materialized view is not stored, it's a query.

That's why you should create it in the form that best fits your applications needs.

See this answer for more detail.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

No - normalization rules apply to the persistence of data, not the presentation of it. E.g., any duplicate rows in a view would break 1NF, which is obviously overly restrictive.

For more info, see First normal form.

link|flag
How is a VIEW with duplicate rows useful? Do you have a real life example in mind? Thanks. – onedaywhen Jun 26 at 13:58
vote up 0 vote down

I dont think this is a rule, but if it was - No rule should always be followed.

link|flag
I think the accepted approach is that you follow the 'rules' of normalization then you follow the 'rules' of denormalization if there are good reason for doing so. Unless you are an anarchist in which case the rules are there are no rules, fight the power, bondage trousers, kudos to you. – onedaywhen Jun 26 at 14:03
vote up 0 vote down

a view (unless it is materialized/indexed view) is nothing but a stored query Views can contain more than one table, can have self joins to the same table etc etc

link|flag
Indeed and I can join a viewed table (a.k.a. VIEW) to other tables... so it would really help matters if all columns are scalar types. – onedaywhen Jun 26 at 13:41
...I've added a description of this usage and the implications for 1NF to my question. – onedaywhen Jun 26 at 13:56

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.