A very common use case in many web applications is that domain objects can be ordered by a user in the web interface - and that order is persisted for later; but I've noticed that every time I need to implement this, I always end up coming up with a solution that is different and adds considerable weight and complexity to a simple domain object. As an example, suppose I have the persistent entity Person
Person {
long id
String name
}
A user goes to /myapp/persons
and sees all people in the system in the order in which they receive compensation (or something) - all of the people can be clicked and dragged and dropped into another position - when the page is loaded again, the order is remembered. The problem is that relational databases just don't seem to have a good way of doing this; nor do ORMs (hibernate is what I use)
I've been thinking of a generic ordering methodology - but there will be some overhead as the data would be persisted separately which could slow down access in some use cases. My question is: has anyone come up with a really good way to model the order of persistent domain objects?
I work in JavaEE with Hibernate or JDBCTemplate - so any code examples would be most useful with those technologies as their basis. Or any conceptual ideas would be welcome too.
UPDATE: I'm not sure where I went wrong, but it seems I was unclear as most have responded with responses that don't really match my question (as it is in my head). The problem is not how do I order rows or columns when I fetch them - it is that the order of the domain objects change - someone clicks and drags a "person" from the bottom of the list to the top of the list - they refresh the page and the list is now in the order they specified.