1

This question is related to this one: Best way to store product colors in a database

So i have a Product which have the multiple properties. Below is an illustration.

Product A

Name: Product A v1.0, Product A v2.0 (2 versions of Product A)
Color: Black, White, Blue
Capacity: 16MB, 32MB, 64MB
Carrier: T-Mobile, Digicel, Vonage

This product can only have one of each property. Ex: a Black 32MB, Vonage product A v2.0

I am unsure of how to setup this product in a normalized database. Do I create separate tables for Product Name, Color, Capacity and Carrier.. and then create a linking table between Product A v1.0 and Color, Product A v1.0 and Capacity, Product A v1.0 and Carrier and so on?

I am also unsure because, Product A v1.0 only offers 16MB Black/White, while v2.0 offers all colors, all capacities and only one cellular carrier. And i could go on with other minor variations.

7
  • Must it have one of each property? Could you have a product without a carrier for instance?
    – corsiKa
    Mar 23, 2012 at 21:46
  • Why not have a column for each, and a value in there. Name is probably a varchar, color you could just store the color as text (or have a separate table that maps to an int - probably overkill imo), capacity store as an int, and carrier probably use a CarrierId that links to another table of Carriers (so you can add more about a carrier)
    – Prescott
    Mar 23, 2012 at 21:48
  • @corsiKa no, Product A v1.0 for instance does not support vonage carrier. Mar 23, 2012 at 21:57
  • @Prescott you mean have a column for each like this? ------------------- name|color|carrier|capacity| etc? Mar 23, 2012 at 22:01
  • Yeah, why not? That's 4 columns, maybe 5 if you add a surrogate primary key (like an auto incremented int). If they only have one value for each, then that will be fine. If they could have multiple values (like Product A could be on carrier T-Mobile and Digicel), they you want to talk about another table similar to Dan's answer
    – Prescott
    Mar 23, 2012 at 22:16

1 Answer 1

6

Here's an example of how I would link product and colors in Oracle (updated to show how you can create a primary key on products with a separate unique key):

CREATE TABLE product_color (
    color_name VARCHAR2(100),
    CONSTRAINT color_pk PRIMARY KEY (color_name)
);

CREATE TABLE product (
    product_id NUMBER,
    product_name VARCHAR2(100),
    color_name VARCHAR2(100),
    CONSTRAINT product_pk PRIMARY KEY (product_id),
    CONSTRAINT color_fk FOREIGN KEY (color_name) 
        REFERENCES product_color (color_name),
    CONSTRAINT product_uk UNIQUE (product_name, color_name)
);

This basically creates a foreign key to a value table. If you try to insert a color or invalid text not in the product_color table, the constraint will prevent it.

Now, I could have normalized this further and associated an integer key with each color, and created a foreign key to the integer. However, this type of normalization will lead to a lot of joins in your SQL statements, particularly when you start adding additional attributes. I find this way to be a good compromise with cleaner SQL.

8
  • +1 for saying don't use surrogate keys where they're not needed.
    – Ben
    Mar 23, 2012 at 22:24
  • @Ben, I've maintained applications that go completely overboard with the surrogate keys. After trying to maintain SQL statements with 20 or 30 joins, I've learned to appreciate the beauty of simplicity. :)
    – Dan A.
    Mar 23, 2012 at 22:27
  • Ok I understand, I can create a Product table, and then add Color, capacity, and carrier to the table as foreign keys. So the table will end up having: product_name(pk), color(fk), capacity(fk), carrier(fk). Sounds good BUT, if the product_name is the primary key, how can i have the following 2 variations in the Product table? : (1) productA, 16MB, Black, T-mobile ** (2) productA, 32MB, Black, T-mobile.. ? Mar 23, 2012 at 22:31
  • @user76859403 You can create a composite primary key on all of the fields that uniquely identify a product in your table. So maybe PRIMARY KEY (product_name, color, capacity, carrier).
    – Dan A.
    Mar 23, 2012 at 22:34
  • On the other hand, it may be easier to create an auto-incrementing primary key so you have an easier way to pull a product from the database without having to pass in multiple fields. Then, to prevent duplicate products, create a separate composite UNIQUE key on all of those fields.
    – Dan A.
    Mar 23, 2012 at 22:36

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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