2 suggestions based on use cases:
- Singular table names.
Although I used to believe in pluralizing table names once, I found in practise that there is little to no benefit to it other than the human mind to think in terms of tables as collections.
When singularising the table names, you can silently add -table to the singular table name in your head, and then it all makes sense again.
SELECT username FROM UserTable
Sounds more natural than
SELECT username FROM UsersTable
But post-fixing every table with is just a waste.
The actual practical argumentation for singularising table names:
What is the plural of person: persons or people?
This is still ok.
But how do you like a table with postfix -status? Statuses?
That sucks, sorry.
It is easy to inadvertently make a human mistake by singularizing the status table, but pluralizing the other tables.
- PascalCasing + Underscore convention.
Given table User
, Role
and a many-to-many table User_Role
.
Considering underscore cased user_role
is dubious when all table names are using underscore per default.
Is user_role
a table that contains user roles? In this case it is not, it is a join table.
When deciding on table name conventions I think it is useful to let go of personal preference and take into account the real practical considerations of real life problems in order to minimize dubious situations to occur.
As the many answers and opinions have indicated, whatever your personal opinion is, different people think differently, and you will not be the only person working on the database despite being the one who sets it up (unless you do, in which case you're only helping yourself).
Therefore it is useful to have practical argumentation (practical in the sense of, does it help my future co-workers to avoid dubious situations) when your past decision is being questioned.