An associate has created a schema that uses an ENUM() column for the primary key on a lookup table. The table turns a product code "FB" into it's name "Foo Bar".
This primary key is then used as a foreign key elsewhere. And at the moment, the FK is also an ENUM().
I think this is not a good idea. This means that to join these two tables, we end up with four lookups. The two tables, plus the two ENUM(). Am I correct?
I'd prefer to have the FKs be CHAR(2) to reduce the lookups. I'd also prefer that the PKs were also CHAR(2) to reduce it completely.
The benefit of the ENUM()s is to get constraints on the values. I wish there was something like: CHAR(2) ALLOW('FB', 'AB', 'CD') that we could use for both the PK and FK columns.
What is:
- Best Practice
- Your preference
This concept is used elsewhere too. What if the ENUM()'s values are longer? ENUM('Ding, dong, dell', 'Baa baa black sheep'). Now the ENUM() is useful from a space point-of-view. Should I only care about this if there are several million rows using the values? In which case, the ENUM() saves storage space.