On 8/7/06, James Tu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If I create a table for each user (I can potentially have hundreds of
thousands of users), will MySQL be able to handle this?
If I just have one table, I could potentially have millions of
records in one table. Will MySQL be able to handle this?
;James Tu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Monday, August 07, 2006 4:11 PM
Subject: Re: Database design question
Thanks everyone.
Now I feel confident that one table will be fine (Tripp's stat of
30 million records put me at ease :) ).
Cheers,
-James
On Aug 7, 2006, at 4:08
Thanks everyone.
Now I feel confident that one table will be fine (Tripp's stat of 30
million records put me at ease :) ).
Cheers,
-James
On Aug 7, 2006, at 4:08 PM, John Meyer wrote:
One table,
USERS
Another table
MESSAGES
With a foreign key referencing users.
Maybe a second foreign key r
One table,
USERS
Another table
MESSAGES
With a foreign key referencing users.
Maybe a second foreign key referencing the destinating user as well.
-Original Message-
From: James Tu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 07, 2006 1:56 PM
To: mysql@lists.mysql.com
Subject: Databa
I want to design a database for lots of users. Each user will be managing
their own messages. Does it make sense to create a table for each user after
they've registered?
Or should I just create one MESSAGES table and store messages there keyed off
of their user_id?
If I create a table for e
I haven't created real project tables yet.
But here are the test ones that I'm experimenting with.
CREATE TABLE east (
id int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment,
keywords varchar(255) default NULL,
east_1 varchar(255) default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
) ;
CREATE TABLE north (
north_id int(11) NOT
If you posted your actual table structures (SHOW CREATE TABLE xx\G) I
think I could be more helpful. Right now I am just "shooting in the dark".
Shawn Green
Database Administrator
Unimin Corporation - Spruce Pine
James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 04/26/2005 02:15:49 PM:
> I tried that and
I tried that and maybe I'm doing something wrong but...
-I have to select the same number of columns...for each UNION
-And each of the records from the union fall under the same column
headings as the first SELECT...
I even tried to define column aliases..
SELECT `running` as `running_blah`...
-J
james tu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 04/26/2005 12:06:34 PM:
> I have four different activities. Each has its own set of data that
> I want to save. So, I made four different tables to hold the saved
> data. Each record also has 'keywords' field (essentially this is the
> only field that all
Mahmoud,
>Are these values atomical?
>My other question is what are the repercussions of
>not putting a table in 2nd and 3rd Normal Form.
Your 'choice1-subchoice1' etc are combined values, so they aren't
atomic. From your three example dropdown values, it looks as if
'choice' and 'subchoice'
I'm not 100% sure as to what you are trying to do, however, the relationship
you describe could, I believe, be modeled as:
Candles (candleid, description, price)
Waxes (waxid, name/description)
Candle_Waxes (candleid, waxid)
Thus one table holds the description and price of each candle, another t
Everything I've read about creating online stores is that you are
selling inventory items, not the items that makeup the inventory item.
So if you sell a red candle made from wax X, candle is the product and
red wax X are two attributes of the product.
Ideally your structure would work for any p
"JOHN MEYER" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 07/04/2004 15:39:10:
> Hi,
> I'm writing a database for an online candle store. Here's the
> situation. This store sells all sorts of items including candles.
> Now the gist is that some of the candles can be made in different
> types of waxes and
On 18-Jun-2003 NIPP, SCOTT V (SBCSI) wrote:
> Hello... I am currently working on a User Account Management
> system. I am actually a Unix SA who is "moonlighting" at work as a MySQL
> DBA and web developer. I am learning a lot and enjoying the work, but I
> am
> severely lacking in databa
[snip]
> Let's say that I have users Mary, Joe, Frank, and Dan. I also have
> servers panther, cheetah, jaguar and lion. The data for each account that I
> want to maintain is UID, GID, home directory, and default shell.
> In designing a table or tables to handle this example what can I
> make
Thanks very much to every who helped me with my MySQL problem!
I will probably go with the three table solution as it also eliminates the
need for yet another table!
Cheers,
Ben
-
Before posting, please check:
http://www.my
> -Original Message-
> From: DL Neil [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
...
> Which begs the questions:
> - in what way are you analyzing "behavior"? and
> - in what way are you analyzing this list-community?
"There's too much to read," is the simple answer to the first question.
Over the las
Nick,
> This is pretty familiar to me because I'm analyzing the behavior of
people
> in on-line discussions, so I'm gathering such data.
Which begs the questions:
- in what way are you analyzing "behavior"? and
- in what way are you analyzing this list-community?
=dn
MySQL list busting
---
In your situation (or any situation, IMHO),
multi-value fields defeat the purpose of good database
design.
I think you are on the right track if you are willing
to tolerate a little redundancy for the sake of
simplicity (as a one-to-many relationship). If you
really want to structure it as a many
> -Original Message-
> From: Ben Holness [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, March 28, 2002 7:43 AM
> Have I understood the two table concept correctly?
> How does the third table fit in?
>
> I guess that if two (or more) of the entries overlap, I could make things
> even
Hi Chris/Nick/Scalper,
Thanks for the replies. I am not too sure how to implement this in tables,
so I will give an example:
Let's say I have three lists - a,b and c. List a contains 10,000 entries,
list b contains 2,500 entries and list c contains 75,000 entries.
I have a table of lists, with
Hi Ben:
Performance would definitely be better if you store the data in the
database as opposed to simply storing references to files. Sounds like you
could solve this with 2 tables with one for the actual lists (assuming the
structure of all your list is the same) and the other for the list
> -Original Message-
> From: Ben Holness [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
...
> My question is this: Would it be more efficient to have each entry in the
> list stored in this table in the database, or would I be better
> off having a
> reference to a file tha
On 3/28/02 1:39 PM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> What I want to do is have a database that keeps track of large distribution
> lists. Each list has a unique ID, an owner (which is a reference to an ID in
> another table) and a creation date.
>
> My question is this: Would it be more efficient to
On Saturday 28 July 2001 15:09, Scott Goldstein wrote:
> I'm new to MySQL and database design and I have a questions concerning
> entities with common attributes.
>
> Suppose I have two entities, foo and bar with the following attributes:
>
> foo: (id, A, B, C, D, F)
> bar: (id, A, B, C, X, Y)
We
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