0

I'm starting a new project using JPA 2 + Hibernate 4.2.6 for data access.

I have two tables in my DB representing two different kinds of Answer, so I have answer_type_a and answer_type_b tables. The are identical except for one field.

Now I'm creating my model classes and I'd like to inherit my AnswerA and AnswerB entities from a commom super-class or interface Answer.

I read some docs about entity inheritance:

but I have not a clear view on how to structure my DB and my entity classes to achieve this. Can you help me?

1
  • Wich version of JPA and Hibernate you are using? Dec 6, 2013 at 14:34

5 Answers 5

0

You need table Answer - that is super for particular others, where you should place all common columns for answer_type_a and answer_type_b. Assume Answer.a_id is primary key, then answer_type_a.a_id answer_type_b.a_id are simultaneously PRIMARY KEY and FOREIGN KEY.

Of course don't forget to place distinguished columns to answer_type_a and answer_type_b

+---------+
| Answer  |
+---------+       ----------------------->--+--------------+
| a_id    +------)                          | answer_type_b|
                  ---->-+--------------+    +--------------+ 
  ...                   | answer_type_a|    | a_id         |
                        +--------------+       ...
                        | a_id         |
                           ....
2
  • Why should I prefer this approach instead of creating a @MappedSuperclass class (avoiding to create a new table in my DB)?
    – davioooh
    Dec 6, 2013 at 14:47
  • It strongly depends on amount of information in answer_type_a and answer_type_b, assume that there are big distinguishes there - then to reduce table overhead you need separate tables. Otherwise use MapperSuperclass or review possibility for discriminator (openjpa.apache.org/builds/1.2.3/apache-openjpa/docs/…)
    – Dewfy
    Dec 6, 2013 at 14:51
0

You need to create one class named Answer with the common fields and you will annotate it with @MappedSuperclass. Additionally, you will have 2 entity classes, named AnswerA and AnswerB which will only hold the "extra" fields.

If you have 2 tables, then you need to use the TABLE_PER_CLASS inheritance type. So add @Inheritance(strategy=InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS) to the Answer class, and probably a @Table annotation to AnswerA and AnswerB.

But if I were you, I would use one table for all answers, with all the needed columns + one discriminator column so you can distinguish if a row is answer type a or type b.

0

Well, as I understand your question is about mapping:

You need a java class Answer which is actually your super class. As there is no corresponding DB table for that, it must be annotated with @MappedSuperclass

@MappedSuperclass
public class Answer {
//fields&properties
}

And now the two classes come, which are entities, as they are persisted in DB tables:

@Entity
@Table("answer_type_a")
public class AnswerA extends Answer {
  //here you add the field that is not common with AnswerB
}
@Entity
@Table("answer_type_b")
public class AnswerB extends Answer {
  //here you add the field that is not common with AnswerA
}

PS: IMHO you don't need any inheritance annotations, as the mapped super class is not an entity.

0

I recently was in a similar situation like you. The best solution found was using an abstract class as a super type, and extending that class to the concrete types (which will represent your entity).

So for your situation you would model something like this.

@MappedSuperClass
public abstract class Answer{
    @Id 
    @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
    public Integer id;

    @Column
    String commonFieldOne;

    @Column
    String commonFieldTwo;

    @Column
    String commonFieldThree;    
    ...    
}

Note that I used the @MappedSuperClass annotation. This tells JPA that this is a super class that will not be instantiated and should not have a database table associated with it. Also note that the Id which will serve as the primary key for both child tables is defined in this class

Now for you concrete classes (which will be mapped to tables in you database), you would use the @Entity annotation.

@Entity
@Table("answer_type_a")
public class AnswerA extends Answer{
   //All common fields from Answer table will be included in the DB tables as columns automatically

    @Column
    String uniqueFieldOne;
    ....

}

You can do the same for @Table("answer_type_b")

Hope this helps!

0

Just create one table in your database e.g answer which contains both fields. You must have three classes Class 1 : Answer, Class 2: Answer_Type_A extends Answer, Class 3: Answer_Type_B extends Answer. There will be an hbm file for Answer (superclass) and two hbm for each Answer_Type_A and Answer_Type_B. In sybclass hbm files include:

<hibernate-mapping>  <subclass name="com.test.Answer_Type_A" 
    extends="com.test.Answer">
<property name="fieldA" />
</subclass>
</hibernate-mapping>

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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