Hey, I could really use some help designing a database for a product list. I feel like I get the idea/principle used to structure the data, but once I start to get my hands dirty, I quickly recede back into a state of confusion.
I was using the student/teacher example since I want the user to populate the list by clicking buttons on another webpage (2 web pages in my case: By Style and By Material). Each web page briefly defines each style or material, so the user can choose to see the cabinet designs available based on their preference.
student/teacher example used to explain the many-to-many relationship concept
I'm using Wix -- bittersweet as it has its own learning curve and limitations
you'll want to call it ProductMaterial or something - you'll probably want to give it an autoincrement id as the primary key, though you probably won't ever use it directly. Then you'll give it two columns: ProductId and MaterialId, and you'll put a unique index on the table that covers both those two columns
@wellington If you ever find yourself asking "how do I easily select from both Style and Material at once?" then they should probably be in the same table. But if they are really logically distinct, then I would advise against trying to combine them for now.
tl;dr about indexes: you should generally only ever reference columns in your WHERE/ON clauses that have indexes on them
A unique index means that for whatever columns are in the index, the database will guarantee that there is only ever one row in the table that has that combination of values
So a unique index on StyleId,ProductId means that ProductId 4 can only ever link to StyleId 2 in one row
How the heck did you get into databases!? Holy crap it's caused me to turn a molehill into a mountain! Everything is more complicated then it seems at first glance
My first job was working on inventory and point of sale software. Very database-heavy
Thankfully, I worked with coworkers who cared a lot about schema and making complicated software maintainable by simplifying as much as possible when it came to the database
A fraternity brother of mine was a developer at the company (very small, less than 10 people total at the time) and they needed someone to do phone support, and I needed a job
So I started doing phone support, and bugged the two developers to install Visual Studio on my machine so I could fix bugs between calls
Unfortunately after the Navy, I went back to school (thinking I was doing the responsible thing) to pursue an engineering degree. Finished 2.5 years and took a semester of to tend to other things, turned into almost 2 years. Most places I look now want you to have experience.
That's awesome man. Sounds like you made the right choice.
I am sure you're right, but it's a jungle out there! I have a good grasp of basic Java so a while back I started getting into the more advanced stuff and I quickly get lost.
How do you get to the point of "making someone else money" in your programming skills?
@wellington I've been working on both front-end and back-end in every job I've had, mostly because I've been working at smaller places with less than 10 developers
Pretty much all of my open source code is JavaScript, even though a good number of it is back-end
I've bounced back and forth learning HTML5 the past year or two. So many different frameworks and new tech being added all the time--that stuff gets confusing and hard to keep up with. That's usually why I give up on that pursuit. ha
i have an apache server on a rasperry pi with dyndns. I was an old project and it worked but it does not work. Somebody have an idea what could be wrong?