147

What is the best way to save enums into a database?

I know Java provides name() and valueOf() methods to convert enum values into a String and back. But are there any other (flexible) options to store these values?

Is there a smart way to make enums into unique numbers (ordinal() is not safe to use)?

Update

Thanks for all awesome and fast answers! It was as I suspected.

However, a note to toolkit: That is one way. The problem is that I would have to add the same methods to each enum type that I create. That's a lot of duplicated code and, at the moment, Java does not support any solutions for this (a Java enum cannot extend other classes).

5
  • 2
    Why is ordinal() not safe to use?
    – Michael Myers
    Oct 23, 2008 at 14:11
  • What kind of database? MySQL has an enum type, but I don't think it's standard ANSI SQL. Oct 23, 2008 at 14:19
  • 8
    Because any enumerative additions must then be put on the end. Easy for an unsuspecting developer to mess this up and cause havoc Oct 23, 2008 at 14:23
  • 1
    I see. Guess it's a good thing I don't deal with databases much, because I probably wouldn't have thought of that until it was too late.
    – Michael Myers
    Oct 23, 2008 at 16:36

11 Answers 11

192

We never store enumerations as numerical ordinal values anymore; it makes debugging and support way too difficult. We store the actual enumeration value converted to string:

public enum Suit { Spade, Heart, Diamond, Club }

Suit theSuit = Suit.Heart;

szQuery = "INSERT INTO Customers (Name, Suit) " +
          "VALUES ('Ian Boyd', %s)".format(theSuit.name());

and then read back with:

Suit theSuit = Suit.valueOf(reader["Suit"]);

The problem was in the past staring at Enterprise Manager and trying to decipher:

Name          Suit
------------  ----
Kylie Guénin  2
Ian Boyd      1

verses

Name          Suit
------------  -------
Kylie Guénin  Diamond
Ian Boyd      Heart

the latter is much easier. The former required getting at the source code and finding the numerical values that were assigned to the enumeration members.

Yes it takes more space, but the enumeration member names are short, and hard drives are cheap, and it is much more worth it to help when you're having a problem.

Additionally, if you use numerical values, you are tied to them. You cannot nicely insert or rearrange the members without having to force the old numerical values. For example, changing the Suit enumeration to:

public enum Suit { Unknown, Heart, Club, Diamond, Spade }

would have to become :

public enum Suit { 
      Unknown = 4,
      Heart = 1,
      Club = 3,
      Diamond = 2,
      Spade = 0 }

in order to maintain the legacy numerical values stored in the database.

How to sort them in the database

The question comes up: lets say i wanted to order the values. Some people may want to sort them by the enum's ordinal value. Of course, ordering the cards by the numerical value of the enumeration is meaningless:

SELECT Suit FROM Cards
ORDER BY SuitID; --where SuitID is integer value(4,1,3,2,0)

Suit
------
Spade
Heart
Diamond
Club
Unknown

That's not the order we want - we want them in enumeration order:

SELECT Suit FROM Cards
ORDER BY CASE SuitID OF
    WHEN 4 THEN 0 --Unknown first
    WHEN 1 THEN 1 --Heart
    WHEN 3 THEN 2 --Club
    WHEN 2 THEN 3 --Diamond
    WHEN 0 THEN 4 --Spade
    ELSE 999 END

The same work that is required if you save integer values is required if you save strings:

SELECT Suit FROM Cards
ORDER BY Suit; --where Suit is an enum name

Suit
-------
Club
Diamond
Heart
Spade
Unknown

But that's not the order we want - we want them in enumeration order:

SELECT Suit FROM Cards
ORDER BY CASE Suit OF
    WHEN 'Unknown' THEN 0
    WHEN 'Heart'   THEN 1
    WHEN 'Club'    THEN 2
    WHEN 'Diamond' THEN 3
    WHEN 'Space'   THEN 4
    ELSE 999 END

My opinion is that this kind of ranking belongs in the user interface. If you are sorting items based on their enumeration value: you're doing something wrong.

But if you wanted to really do that, i would create a Suits dimension table:

Suit SuitID Rank Color
Unknown 4 0 NULL
Heart 1 1 Red
Club 3 2 Black
Diamond 2 3 Red
Spade 0 4 Black

This way, when you want to change your cards to use Kissing Kings New Deck Order you can change it for display purposes without throwing away all your data:

Suit SuitID Rank Color CardOrder
Unknown 4 0 NULL NULL
Spade 0 1 Black 1
Diamond 2 2 Red 1
Club 3 3 Black -1
Heart 1 4 Red -1

Now we are separating an internal programming detail (enumeration name, enumeration value) with a display setting meant for users:

SELECT Cards.Suit 
FROM Cards
   INNER JOIN Suits ON Cards.Suit = Suits.Suit
ORDER BY Suits.Rank, 
   Card.Rank*Suits.CardOrder
    
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  • 23
    toString is often overriden to provide display value. name() is a better choice as it's by definition the counterpart of valueOf()
    – ddimitrov
    Oct 23, 2008 at 14:40
  • 11
    I strongly disagree with this, if enum persistence is required then should not persist names. as far as reading it back goes it is even simpler with value instead of name can just typecast it as SomeEnum enum1 = (SomeEnum)2;
    – mamu
    Sep 3, 2009 at 3:49
  • 3
    mamu: What happens when the numeric equivalents change?
    – Ian Boyd
    Sep 4, 2009 at 15:34
  • 5
    I would discourage anyone using this approach. Tying yourself to string representation limits code flexibility and refactoring. You should better use unique ids. Also storing strings wastes storage space.
    – Tautvydas
    Apr 18, 2014 at 18:57
  • 3
    @LuisGouveia I agree with you that the time could double. Causing a query that takes 12.37 ms to instead take 12.3702 ms. That's what i mean by "in the noise". You run the query again and it takes 13.29 ms, or 11.36 ms. In other words, the randomness of the thread scheduler will drastically swamp any micro optimization you theoretically have that is in no way visible to anyone in any way ever.
    – Ian Boyd
    Oct 22, 2019 at 14:31
49

Unless you have specific performance reasons to avoid it, I would recommend using a separate table for the enumeration. Use foreign key integrity unless the extra lookup really kills you.

Suits table:

suit_id suit_name
1       Clubs
2       Hearts
3       Spades
4       Diamonds

Players table

player_name suit_id
Ian Boyd           4
Shelby Lake        2
  1. If you ever refactor your enumeration to be classes with behavior (such as priority), your database already models it correctly
  2. Your DBA is happy because your schema is normalized (storing a single integer per player, instead of an entire string, which may or may not have typos).
  3. Your database values (suit_id) are independent from your enumeration value, which helps you work on the data from other languages as well.
4
  • 17
    While I agree it is nice to have it normalized, and constrained in the DB, this does cause updates in two places to add a new value (code and db), which might cause more overhead. Also, spelling mistakes should be nonexistent if all updates are done programatically from the Enum name.
    – Jason
    Oct 13, 2009 at 18:23
  • 3
    I agree with the comment above. An alternative enforcement mechanism at the database level would be to write a constraint trigger, which would reject inserts or updates that try to use an invalid value. Jun 21, 2012 at 16:11
  • 1
    Why would I want to declare the same information in two places? Both in CODE public enum foo {bar} and CREATE TABLE foo (name varchar); that can easily get out of sync.
    – ebyrob
    Nov 11, 2016 at 16:17
  • If we take the accepted answer at face value, that is that the enum names are only used for manual investigations, then this answer is indeed the best option. Also, if you go on changing enumeration order or values or names, you will always have much more problems than maintaining this extra table. Especially when you only need it (and may choose to create only temporarily) for debugging and support.
    – Tadas S
    Jun 1, 2017 at 17:51
8

I have faced the same issue where my objective is to persist Enum String value into database instead of Ordinal value.

To over come this issue, I have used @Enumerated(EnumType.STRING) and my objective got resolved.

For Example, you have an Enum Class:

public enum FurthitMethod {

    Apple,
    Orange,
    Lemon
}

In the entity class, define @Enumerated(EnumType.STRING):

@Enumerated(EnumType.STRING)
@Column(name = "Fruits")
public FurthitMethod getFuritMethod() {
    return fruitMethod;
}

public void setFruitMethod(FurthitMethod authenticationMethod) {
    this.fruitMethod= fruitMethod;
}

While you try to set your value to Database, String value will be persisted into Database as "APPLE", "ORANGE" or "LEMON".

7

As you say, ordinal is a bit risky. Consider for example:

public enum Boolean {
    TRUE, FALSE
}

public class BooleanTest {
    @Test
    public void testEnum() {
        assertEquals(0, Boolean.TRUE.ordinal());
        assertEquals(1, Boolean.FALSE.ordinal());
    }
}

If you stored this as ordinals, you might have rows like:

> SELECT STATEMENT, TRUTH FROM CALL_MY_BLUFF

"Alice is a boy"      1
"Graham is a boy"     0

But what happens if you updated Boolean?

public enum Boolean {
    TRUE, FILE_NOT_FOUND, FALSE
}

This means all your lies will become misinterpreted as 'file-not-found'

Better to just use a string representation

0
6

I would argue that the only safe mechanism here is to use the String name() value. When writing to the DB, you could use a sproc to insert the value and when reading, use a View. In this manner, if the enums change, there is a level of indirection in the sproc/view to be able to present the data as the enum value without "imposing" this on the DB.

1
  • 1
    I'm using a hybrid approach of your solution and @Ian Boyd's solution with great success. Thanks for the tip! Jul 13, 2009 at 14:04
5

For a large database, I am reluctant to lose the size and speed advantages of the numeric representation. I often end up with a database table representing the Enum.

You can enforce database consistency by declaring a foreign key -- although in some cases it might be better to not declare that as a foreign key constraint, which imposes a cost on every transaction. You can ensure consistency by periodically doing a check, at times of your choosing, with:

SELECT reftable.* FROM reftable
  LEFT JOIN enumtable ON reftable.enum_ref_id = enumtable.enum_id
WHERE enumtable.enum_id IS NULL;

The other half of this solution is to write some test code that checks that the Java enum and the database enum table have the same contents. That's left as an exercise for the reader.

2
  • 3
    Say the average enumeration name length is 7 characters. Your enumID is four bytes, so you have an extra three bytes per row by using names. 3 bytes x 1 million rows is 3MB.
    – Ian Boyd
    Dec 1, 2011 at 15:06
  • @IanBoyd: But an enumId surely fits in two bytes (longer enums are not possible in Java) and most of them fit in a single byte (which some DB support). The saved space is negligible, but the faster comparison and the fixed length should help.
    – maaartinus
    Jan 24, 2014 at 13:23
5

We just store the enum name itself. It's more readable.

We did mess around with adding an additional property to the enum where the enum has a limited set of values. For example, in the following enum, we use a char property to represent the enum value in the database (a char is more meaningful than a numeric value):

public enum EmailStatus {
    EMAIL_NEW('N'), EMAIL_SENT('S'), EMAIL_FAILED('F'), EMAIL_SKIPPED('K'), UNDEFINED('-');

    private char dbChar = '-';

    EmailStatus(char statusChar) {
        this.dbChar = statusChar;
    }

    public char statusChar() {
        return dbChar;
    }

    public static EmailStatus getFromStatusChar(char statusChar) {
        switch (statusChar) {
        case 'N':
            return EMAIL_NEW;
        case 'S':
            return EMAIL_SENT;
        case 'F':
            return EMAIL_FAILED;
        case 'K':
            return EMAIL_SKIPPED;
        default:
            return UNDEFINED;
        }
    }
}

And when you have a lot of values, you can have a Map inside your enum to keep that getFromXYZ method small.

2
  • If you don't want to maintain a switch statement and can ensure that dbChar is unique you could use something like: public static EmailStatus getFromStatusChar(char statusChar) { return Arrays.stream(EmailStatus.values()) .filter(e -> e.statusChar() == statusChar) .findFirst() .orElse(UNDEFINED); }
    – Kuchi
    Nov 24, 2016 at 9:51
  • An additional and important benefit of adding a property like dbChar to the enum is that it allows the enum values to be renamed in the future without consequences. If the enum's name() and valueOf() methods are used to save and read the enum values to/from the database, then renaming the enum values in the future is not possible without rework. Aug 5, 2022 at 17:52
3

All my experience tells me that safest way of persisting enums anywhere is to use an additional code value or id (some kind of evolution of JeeBee's answer). This could be a nice example of an idea:

enum Race {
    HUMAN ("human"),
    ELF ("elf"),
    DWARF ("dwarf");

    private final String code;

    private Race(String code) {
        this.code = code;
    }

    public String getCode() {
        return code;
    }
}

Now you can go with any persistence referencing your enum constants by its code. Even if you decide to change some of the constant names, you always can save the code value (e.g. DWARF("dwarf") to GNOME("dwarf")).

Ok, dive some more deeper with this conception. Here is some utility method, that helps you find any enum value, but first lets extend our approach.

interface CodeValue {
    String getCode();
}

And let our enum implement it:

enum Race implement CodeValue {...}

This is the time for magic search method:

static <T extends Enum & CodeValue> T resolveByCode(Class<T> enumClass, String code) {
    T[] enumConstants = enumClass.getEnumConstants();
    for (T entry : enumConstants) {
        if (entry.getCode().equals(code)) return entry;
    }
    // In case we failed to find it, return null.
    // I'd recommend you make some log record here to get notified about wrong logic, perhaps.
    return null;
}

And use it like a charm: Race race = resolveByCode(Race.class, "elf")

2

If saving enums as strings in the database, you can create utility methods to (de)serialize any enum:

   public static String getSerializedForm(Enum<?> enumVal) {
        String name = enumVal.name();
        // possibly quote value?
        return name;
    }

    public static <E extends Enum<E>> E deserialize(Class<E> enumType, String dbVal) {
        // possibly handle unknown values, below throws IllegalArgEx
        return Enum.valueOf(enumType, dbVal.trim());
    }

    // Sample use:
    String dbVal = getSerializedForm(Suit.SPADE);
    // save dbVal to db in larger insert/update ...
    Suit suit = deserialize(Suit.class, dbVal);
1
  • Nice to use this with a default enum value to fall back on in deserialize. For example, catch the IllegalArgEx and return Suit.None.
    – Jason
    Oct 13, 2009 at 18:21
1

Multiple values with OR relation for one, enum field. The concept for .NET with storing enum types in database like a byte or an int and using FlagsAttribute in your code.

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/efdesign/archive/2011/06/29/enumeration-support-in-entity-framework.aspx

1

You can use an extra value in the enum constant that can survive both name changes and resorting of the enums:

public enum MyEnum {
    MyFirstValue(10),
    MyFirstAndAHalfValue(15),
    MySecondValue(20);

    public int getId() {
        return id;
    }
    public static MyEnum of(int id) {
        for (MyEnum e : values()) {
            if (id == e.id) {
                return e;
            }
        }
        return null;
    }
    MyEnum(int id) {
        this.id = id;
    }
    private final int id;
}

To get the id from the enum:

int id = MyFirstValue.getId();

To get the enum from an id:

MyEnum e = MyEnum.of(id);

I suggest using values with no meaning to avoid confusion if the enum names have to be changed.

In the above example, I've used some variant of "Basic row numbering" leaving spaces so the numbers will likely stay in the same order as the enums.

This version is faster than using a secondary table, but it makes the system more dependent on code and source code knowledge.

To remedy that, you can set up a table with the enum ids in the database as well. Or go the other way and pick ids for the enums from a table as you add rows to it.

Sidenote: Always verify that you are not designing something that should be stored in a database table and maintained as a regular object though. If you can imagine that you have to add new constants to the enum at this point, when you are setting it up, that's an indication you may be better off creating a regular object and a table instead.

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