Is it bad to duplicate names and prices into order_lines tables (references from product and options tables)?
I've have checked a few popular ecommerce open sources PHP scripts and it does it.
Assume the following tables (quick example):
product
table:
+------------+--------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------+--------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| product_id | int(11) | NO | PRI | NULL | auto_increment |
| name | varchar(150) | NO | | NULL | |
+------------+--------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
options
table: (a product can have 1 or more options, eg: small, large, x-large, etc)
+------------+--------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------+--------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| option_id | int(11) | NO | PRI | NULL | auto_increment |
| product_id | int(11) | NO | | NULL | |
| name | varchar(150) | NO | | NULL | |
| price | decimal(6,2) | NO | | NULL | |
+------------+--------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
Company will be getting about 5000 new orders daily, I am looking for a reasonable way how to design order, order_line tables? Do you duplicate names and prices into order_lines table? Hundreds of prices will be changed every few month from the options
table.
I have read about versioning (Type 2), im not sure how it actually work, from what I can understand I can add version_id
field in the product
, options
and order_line tables. Whatever the MAX version_id is, its mean the latest version. It seem much easier than using StartDate and EndDate design.
I am looking for the design methodology that can be done quick and reasonable. Not too complicated design.