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I am going to create a voting system for a web application and wonder what the best way would be to store the votes in the (SQL) database.

The voting system is similiar to the one of StackOverflow. I am pondering now if I should store the up and down votes in different tables. That way it is easier to count all up votes resp. down votes. On the other hand I have to query two tables to find all votes for an user or voted item.

An alternative would be one table with a boolean field that specifies if this vote is an up or down vote. But I guess counting up or down votes is quite slow (when you have a lot of votes), and an index on a boolean field (as far as I know) does not make a lot of sense.

How would you create the database structure? One or two tables?

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  • If you are only counting votes on posts, no matter who/when/why, I would put a field 'votes' in the Post table (how to prevent more than one vote?). If you need to count votes with all details (when, who...), you definitely need another table. And if you are counting votes for different entites (posts, comments, videos), I would add another table (eg vote_type). Dec 9, 2010 at 23:47
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    @Julio How do you tell if a user has already voted on a particular post?
    – El Ronnoco
    Dec 9, 2010 at 23:50
  • @El Ronnoco how would I know his specifications? I'm just giving several ways. With the last two solutions you can. Dec 9, 2010 at 23:52
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    @Julio Yes, I want to store as much info as possible about the vote ... who / when / what. Thats why I want at minimum one vote table. But think of the following ... you have ten million votes and want to find out the up votes. That's pretty bad with only having one vote table that stores the up or down vote in a boolean field. And that is why I thought about two tables, but wasn't sure. But as longer as I think about it ... the more I come to the conclusion that two tables is the way to go. One for up and the other for down (at least if you expect a lot of votes).
    – medihack
    Dec 10, 2010 at 0:02
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    Yes, simply add an integer field. When someone votes, modify that field (+1/-1; be carefull with overflows if you have that much users :p) and log the votes in a table storing for example who voted, the date, up/down, the post, etc. Dec 10, 2010 at 0:19

4 Answers 4

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Regarding the comments, we found the solution that best fits to Zardoz

He does not want to always count votes and needs as much details as possible. So the solution is a mix of both.

  1. Adding an integer field in the considered table to store vote counts (make sure there won't be overflows).
  2. Create additional tables to log the votes (user, post, date, up/down, etc.)

I would recommend to use triggers to automatically update the 'vote count field' when inserting/deleting/updating a vote in the log table.

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  • As we can log vote count of both question and answer table, how to create a link between Log table and different entities? Do we need to create a composite key of userid +entityId + entityType on log table? We need to consider to handle the duplicate upvote from same user.
    – rahulP
    Jun 26, 2023 at 16:07
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If your votes are just up/down then you could make a votes table linking to the posts and having a value of 1 or -1 (up / down). This way you can sum in a single go.

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  • That sounds nice. Thanks for the suggestion.
    – medihack
    Dec 10, 2010 at 0:04
  • wont this create an N+1 query since you'd have to make a (select sum(value) from post_vote) query N times? What do you think about the accepted answers approach? I am working on something like this myself, and was wondering how I should go about it.
    – Jaigus
    Jun 18, 2014 at 23:21
  • How do you mean ? When displaying multiple posts ? Then you would do a group by like this i.e. SELECT p.id, p.title, SUM(pv.value) AS votes FROM [posts] p LEFT OUTER JOIN [post_vote] pv ON p.id = pv.post_id GROUP BY p.id, p.title Jun 19, 2014 at 8:38
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https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/1863/so-database-schema

Worth a look or

http://sqlserverpedia.com/wiki/Understanding_the_StackOverflow_Database_Schema

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You will need a link table between users and the entities which are being voted on, I would have thought. This will allow you to see which users have already voted and prevent them from submitting further votes. The table can record in a boolean whether it is an up or down vote.

I would advise storing in the voted entity a current vote tally field to ease querying. The saving in size would be negligible if you omitted this.

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