While recreating my CMS, I wanted an alternative to the traditional parent/child approach for managing the sitemap / page hierarchy. I had remembered seeing the nested set model a while back, but couldn't remember what it was called. So, I stumbled upon a similar approach that I want to evaluate and compare the properties, making sure I won't run into dumb limitations later on because I didn't go with what is already time-tested. So, please advise if A) it's already been invented (what's it called?!), B) there are fundamental flaws in the properties, or C) it's a good approach (please give good justification!).
Consider this list:
- Home
- About Us
- Contact Us
- Products
- Clothing
- Books
- Electronics
- Knowledge Base
- Other stuff
Under the nested set model, I believe you store the left/right descriptors for each node with a depth-first traversal:
Home 1-18
About Us 2-3
Contact Us 4-5
Products 6-13
Clothing 7-8
Books 9-10
Electronics 11-12
Knowledge Base 14-15
Other stuff 16-17
And here's my "wrong way" that I'm starting to like better:
Home 1-9
About Us 2-2
Contact Us 3-3
Products 4-7
Clothing 5-5
Books 6-6
Electronics 7-7
Knowledge Base 8-8
Other stuff 9-9
Rather than a left/right pair, I'm storing ID and LAST_CONTAINED_ID. I found that many of the properties are the same (or very similar):
- The root node is ID = 1
- For "leaves," both properties are equal, while with branches, they are not
- The total number of "subnodes" for any given node is LAST_CONTAINED_ID - ID
- All contained nodes have an ID > the container's ID, but <= the container's LAST_CONTAINED_ID
- The ancestor nodes have an ID < the child ID, but also a LAST_CONTAINED_ID >= the child ID
- The depth is the SUM of the ancestor nodes
In addition, the ID serves an order-specific, unique identifier (with no gaps!). I've found it easier also to store DEPTH and PARENT references for simplicity, but that's pretty much the same for nested sets too from what I understand.
So, does this count as a nested set? And is it already a common approach (but why hadn't I heard of it before...)? Is there a good reason why I should use a true nested set over this?
I welcome your thoughts.
