In a simple calendar application, I'm particularly interested in understanding the pros/cons of storing recurring events versus calculating them. I have a list of what I feel are the pros/cons of each, but I'm curious if anyone has experience and might be able to provide me with more definitive reasoning for one way or the other
Storing
Pros
- Read efficiency (dates in a date range is a single, indexed query)
- Easily handle overrides (simply update a single item)
Cons
- Requires a process for calculating and storing future events (how far forward to go?)
- Expensive to make changes that affect all events (have to update all rows - write heavy)
- More data
Calculating
Pros
- Nothing to keep in sync
- Efficient writing of events (drop a single entry in a table)
- Less data
Cons
- Expensive to generate a calendar for a timeframe (have to select all single instance events, then all recurring events that could possibly overlap, then calculate recurrences to determine if any of them actually do overlap)
- More difficult to handle exclusions/overrides (specify an override date for the recurring event, then add a separate single event for the date to change
In general, the list above seems to point towards calculating, which I think makes sense for a single user/few user system. Would the decision change if the system were to be scaled out to, say, an Exchange server hosting 10k+ users and their calendars?