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How would one structure a table for an entity that can have a one to many relationship to itself? Specifically, I'm working on an app to track animal breeding. Each animal has an ID; it's also got a sire ID and a dame ID. So it's possible to have a one to many from the sire or dame to its offspring. I would be inclined to something like this:

ID INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY
SIRE_ID INT 
DAME_ID INT

and record a null value for those animals which were purchased and added to the breeding stock and an ID in the table for the rest.

So:

  1. Can someone point me to an article/web page that discusses modeling this sort of relationship?
  2. Should the ID be an INT or some sort of String? A NULL in the INT would indicate that the animal has no parents in the database but a String with special flag values could be used to indicate the same thing.
  3. Would this possibly be best modeled via two tables? I mean one table for the animals and a separate table solely indicating kinship e. g.:

    Animal

    ID INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY

    Kinship

    ID INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY FOREIGN KEY

    SIRE_ID INT PRIMARY KEY FOREIGN KEY

    DAME_ID INT PRIMARY KEY FOREIGN KEY

I apologize for the above: my SQL is rusty. I hope it sort of conveys what I'm thinking about.

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  • if you're using Oracle look for info about connect_path. it's an extension to sql that allows to make 'hierarchical queries', retrieving in 1 query all descendants or ancestors liked by the relationship you want.
    – helios
    Oct 1, 2008 at 22:15

9 Answers 9

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Well, this is a "normal" one-to-many relationship and the method you suggest is the classical one for solving it.

Note that two tables are denormalized (I can't point out exactly where the superkey-is-not-well-should-be-subset-of-other-key-fsck-I-forgot part is, but I'm pretty sure it's there somewhere); the intuitive reason is that a tuple in the first one matches at most a tuple in the second one, so unless you have lots of animals with null sire and dame IDs, it's not a good solution in any prospect (it worsens performance -- need a join -- and does not reduce storage requirements).

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  • Thanks so much--this is exactly what I was hoping to get. Oct 1, 2008 at 22:11
  • normalized forms, at least 3 first of them, talk about using the correct table and the correct pk. a) avoiding merging a subset of columns with their own functional dependency into a bigger table (2NF) b) avoiding transitive relationship with pk. note that here it's not the case so it's perfect.
    – helios
    Oct 1, 2008 at 22:13
  • I'm pretty sure this counts as a degenerate case of transitivity.
    – millenomi
    Oct 1, 2008 at 22:25
4

I think your layout using just one table is fine. You definitely want to keep SIRE_ID and DAME_ID in the same data type as ID. You also want to declare them as FOREIGN KEYs (it is possible to have a foreign key point back to the same table, and a foreign key can also be null).

ID INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY
SIRE_ID INT REFERENCES TABLENAME (ID)
DAME_ID INT REFERENCES TABLENAME (ID)

Using this layout, you can easily look up the parent animals, and you could also build an offspring tree for a given animal (for Oracle there is CONNECT BY)

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I asked a similar question a number of months ago on the MySQL website. I would recommend that you take a look at the response that I received from Peter Brawley regarding this type of relationship: http://forums.mysql.com/read.php?135,187196,187196#msg-187196

If you want to research the topic further then I would recommend that you look into Tree Hierarchies on Wikipedia.

An alternate suggested architecture (that would be fully normalized) would look something like the following:

Table: animal

ID | Name | Breed

Table: pedigree

animal_id | parent_id | parentType (either sire or dame)

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  • @gabriel1836, Thanks for the link--that's exactly the sort of thing I was looking for. Oct 1, 2008 at 22:11
  • Table pedigree can also old other interesting data such as inseminationDate, etc ... Oct 3, 2008 at 11:17
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INT is the better choice for the ID column and better suited if you should use a sequence to generate the unique IDs.

I don't see any benefit in splitting the design into two tables.

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  • The benefit in splitting the design into two tables is simply to normalise the data structure. It usually allows optimal use of SQL functionalities. Oct 3, 2008 at 11:23
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I don't know about animal breeding, but it sounds like your Sire_ID is the father and Dame_ID is the mother? No problem. One row per animal, null sire_ and dame_ID's for purchased animals, I don't forsee any problems.

[ID],[Sire_ID],[Dame_ID];
0,null,null  (male)
1,null,null  (female)
2,null,null  (female)
3,0,1 (male)
4,0,2 (male)
5,null,null  (female)
6,3,5
7,4,5

and so forth. You would likely populate a TreeView or XmlNodeList in a while loop...

While (myAnimal.HasChildren) {
 Animal[] children = GetChildren(Animal.ID)
 for (int x=0; x<children.length; x++) 
  myAnimal.Children.Add(children[x]);
}

In this case, Animal.Children is a Collection of Animals. Therefore, myAnimal.Children[0].Father would return myAnimal. .Parent[] could be a collection of its two parents, which should work as long as [0] is always one parent (father) and [1] is always the other (mother).

Make ID an Autonumber PK and assign Sire_ID and Dame_ID programatically by returning the IDs of its parents. No foreign key relationships should be neccessary though both parent IDs could reference back to ID if you really want to.

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Use the "connect by" clause with SQL to tell it which hierarchy to follow.

0

It's not really a one to many relationship, unless an animal can have many parents.

I would leave it as a single table with the unique key ID for the animal, one int field for each of the parents, and probably a text field to use for general notes about the animal, like where it was purchased if that's the case.

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  • 2
    You're looking at it the wrong way. One parent to many offspring. :-) Oct 1, 2008 at 22:10
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I think that since it is clear that an animal only has one sire and one dam, that using a single table would make the most sense. My preference is to use int or bigint as the row identifier, with a null value signifying no relationship. I would probably, then, to use some other method to uniquely identify animals so they don't end up in the table twice and create a unique index on that column as well.

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Seems like you want to build something like a tree.

What about something like?:

 ID          Primary Key,
 Parent_ID   Foreing_Key
 ( data )

There are some functionality for doing querys in tables with relations to themselves. See the syntax of Connect By: http://www.adp-gmbh.ch/ora/sql/connect_by.html

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