I have a product catalog. Each category consists of different number (in deep) of subcategories. The number of levels (deep) is unknown, but I quite sure that it will not be exceed of 5,6 levels. The data changes are much more rarely then reads.

The question is: what type of hierarchical data model is more suitable for such situation. The project is based on Django framework and it's peculiarities (admin i-face, models handling...) should be considered.

Many thanks!

link|improve this question

feedback

4 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Nested sets are better for performance, if you don't need frequent updates or hierarchical ordering.

If you need either tree updates or hierarchical ordering, it's better to use parent-child data model.

It's easily constructed in Oracle and SQL Server 2005+, and not so easily (but still possible) in MySQL.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I would use the Modified Preorder Tree Traversal algorithm, MPTT, for this sort of hierarchical data. This allows great performance on traversing the tree and finding children, if you don't mind a bit of a penalty on changes to the structure.

Luckily Django has a great library available for this, django-mptt. I've used this in a number of projects with a lot of success. There's also django-treebeard which offers several alternative algorithms, but I haven't used it (and it doesn't seem as popular as mptt anyway).

link|improve this answer
Note: MPTT and "Nested Set" are different names for the same concept. – jwfearn Nov 4 '10 at 22:02
feedback

According to these articles:

http://explainextended.com/2009/09/24/adjacency-list-vs-nested-sets-postgresql/ http://explainextended.com/2009/09/29/adjacency-list-vs-nested-sets-mysql/

"MySQL is the only system of the big four (MySQL, Oracle, SQL Server, PostgreSQL) for which the nested sets model shows decent performance and can be considered to stored hierarchical data."

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.