I'm currently designing a schema for a resource that is used in my app (simplified to an 'order' here). I've got a bit tangled with cross-referencing / being able to reference a resource that doesn't yet have a concrete identifier.
I've got 3 possible designs below. Some are closer to the domain + mental model of the object (A + C), and B may be simpler, but involves a re-orientated mapping (for sending to the server) to solve the problem.
My question: Of the 3 designs below, which seems the most robust/correct? (Or, offer an improved solution)
Detail:
The resource I'm wanting to send in one request is:
- Order
- Products[]
- Fees[]
- Customers[]
And some context / my constraints are:
- Each product & fee is assigned to a customer
- The 'customer' property is just a snapshot of text - and must be attached to one order. (It's not intended to be a set of reusable customers)
- In the domain, most of the UI/analysis centers around the totals of the order as a whole.
- Only in a few cases do we look at the data from the 'per customer' view
- The same object is sometimes used for transient queries
- E.g.: Calculate shipping. (So DB persistence is not always a given, for this resource schema)
Option A: Create the customers first, then use their IDs
If the customers are the dependency, then I could create them beforehand. Through input checking, I can keep each 'customer' associated to only 1 order.
This option accepts that it can't all be done in the one request.
Note: It also assumes that the customers must persist to DB. I can't, for example, run this same object through a transient 'calculate shipping' query.
POST: {
name: "Person 1",
}
-> ID: 81
POST: {
name: "Person 2",
}
-> ID: 92
{
products: [{
productId: 3,
quantity: 2,
customer: 81
}, {
productId: 4,
quantity: 1,
customer: 92
}],
fees: [{
feeId: 21,
amount: 30,
customer: 81
}, {
feeID: 32,
amount: 2,
customer: 92
}]
}
Option B: Re-orientate the packet around the customer
It seems clean - Though it would involve the UI mapping to this format, and the DB will likely map back to use the format similar to Option A/C.
{
customerOrders: [{
name: "Person 1",
products: [{
productId: 3,
quantity: 2
}],
fees: [{
feeId: 21,
amount: 30
}]
}, {
name: "Person 2",
products: [{
productId: 4,
quantity: 1
}],
fees: [{
feeID: 32,
amount: 2
}]
}]
}
Option C: Cross referencing properties, and temporary IDs
This is similar to Option A, and just exploring if it can all be done in one request. Generating temp IDs + making the server deal with it seems awkward - but I assume there may actually be an elegant way to achieve it.
{
products: [{
productId: 3,
quantity: 2,
customer: "a"
}, {
productId: 4,
quantity: 1,
customer: "b"
}],
fees: [{
feeId: 21,
amount: 30,
customer: "a"
}, {
feeID: 32,
amount: 2,
customer: "b"
}],
customers: [{
name: "Person 1",
tempId: "a"
}, {
name: "Person 2",
tempId: "b"
}]
}