I could really use some insights on choosing between the following two database layouts.
Layout #1 | Layout #2
|
CUSTOMERS | CUSTOMERS
id int pk | id int pk
info char | info char
|
ORDERS | ORDERS
id int pk | id int pk
customerid int fk | customerid int fk
date timedate | date timedate
|
DETAILS | INVOICES
id int pk | id int pk
orderid int fk | orderid int fk
date timedate | date timedate
description char |
amount real | DETAILS
period int | id int pk
| invoiceid int fk
| date timedate
| description char
| amount real
This is a billing application for a small business, a sole proprietor. The first layout has no separate table for invoices, relying instead on the field 'period' in DETAILS for the billing cycle number. The second layout introduces a table specifically for invoices.
Specifically in this application, at what point do you see Layout #1 breaking, or what kind of things will get harder and harder as the amount of data increases? In the case of Layout #2, what does the added flexibility/complexity mean in practical terms? What are the implications for 30-60-90 aging? I'm sure that will be necessary at some point.
More generally, this seems to be a general case of whether you track/control something through a field in a table or a whole new table, yet it's not really a normalization issue, is it? How do you generally make the choice?