Hi all, I'm trying to generate a random 6digit code per user and this is my code pastebin.com/DXxZzN0Y - so far it generates and saves to db etc but how can I make it so that if a user_id on the table has a unique_code don't generate a new one?
the and part in the query doesnt do anything. I'm trying to generate a random unique code when someone fills a form. Then it will be added to the url for social sharing etc and the user will gain a point in the system per share
@Ekin That would be a composite key, yes, but upon looking at your code I don't think that's what you're looking for. I think you just want a unique constraint on that firstID field and a timestamp to check when it was last generated.
Kind of, not really. You still have no guarantee it will be unique.
Given enough concurrent requests to the server in a narrow enough window, you still have a very tiny possibility of collision. The "Good Enough" approach is to set a unique constraint on the schema and have a retry attempt if the UPDATE fails then ensure more remote failure by increasing the entropy/key-space
The better approach would be to generate a finite set, which is then guaranteed to be unique, and randomly select a value from that. i.e. removing the value from the set and thus preventing its reuse.
Alright I think I'll go with the better approach , about unique code per user I was thinking I can do like if the userID is already on the table then dont generate a new one
You have to be careful with that. A primary key serves a very different purpose in your database though. It's meant to uniquely identify that user's row in the table. If suddenly you need to change whatever this token is being used for you could put yourself into a logical inconsistency scenario or break a transitive functional dependency.
It's best to steer clear of those, especially early on.
The rule of thumb is generally to not use the same column for more than one thing. If a single column has more than one meaning to the entity, it's not 1NF.
The table will be only for the userID and the unique_code and I'll be only using it to retrieve those columns. For any other functionality etc I'll be only using the retrieved value of userID from there and match it in the main users table etc. If the userId is the primary key on the table, and the unique_codes won't change after they are created then it should be okay?
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