@TehShrike Tickets are recorded when they are sold
A trip can be done by many buses and a bus can do many trips, a bus has a section that has seats ordered by columns and rows, this seat, what i want is that when a ticket is sold the seat change of state from available to unavailable
Like in movie theathers, the rooms can display many movies, when selling the tickets you give the seat to a client and that seat becomes unavailable for that movie, and when changing of movie, the seats become available again for new clients
do you mean if people buy once for a ticket an will go on that route forever with the same ticket? in that case no, people buy tickets of trips at a point in time
@TehShrike have you dealt with setting form validity with async functions in Angular in the latest beta releases? Weird stuff. I finally figured it all out.
If I buy a ticket, wouldn't it have 1. the bus I would be taking 2. my seat 3. where it was leaving from 4. where it was going to 5. what time it was leaving?
I'm not asking about your current schema, I'm asking about reality
If your current schema doesn't have a record somewhere that represents a trip at a point in time, then you need to add that table
and then tickets would need to be associated with a record in that table, as well as a seat record that was associated with some bus
yes, you're right, but that information can be called in a query that relate all those tables from the table 'TRIP_BUS' of the schema, the only thing that can't be taken is the seat i i relate the 'TICKET' to that table
the image i gave you had something wrong, this one is a correct
@TehShrike and how would i know the seat assigned to that ticket if seat isn't associated with that table, it's associated to bus
but if i associate seats with ticket too then i'll get a circle of relations between BUS -> SECTION -> SEAT -> TICKET -> TRIP_BUS and then to BUS again (those are the table names check it in the [image] (i.stack.imgur.com/KbLD7.png))
I've never heard of the definition of a normalized database including "no cycles"
Which normal form would that relationship violate?
Relational databases represent graphs, but they don't have to represent trees
As long as your concept of a "seat" is solid - and you have one row in one table that represents a singular "seat" - you can have multiple other rows in your database that could have different relationships to that same seat
@TehShrike Maybe there are not definition of normalized database includes no cycles, but i want to keep [data consistency] (codeproject.com/Articles/38655/…)
@NonExistent that is correct, but the problem in that case is not that there are cycles - the problem is that the same relationship is described multiple times. In that example, projects only have one kind of relationship to teams, so it's a problem that there are two ways to link to them in that first schema.
Your case is different - you actually have different ways that busses relate to seats.
It's the difference between "what seats does this bus have in it physically" and "what seats are taken on this bus for this scheduled trip"
Those are two different relationships. If you only describe the latter, then the only way that you could figure out what seats were in a bus physically was by looking at all of the tickets that had been sold, seeing what the seat numbers were, and inferring that those seats must be in the bus, since tickets were sold for them at some point in time
@NonExistent you'd have to infer everything about seats. Tickets would have a "column" and "row" or maybe just a seat number, and when working with busses, you'd just have to know/assume what seats it had
But I think it would be better to actually represent the seats on a bus then to have it defined somewhere outside of your schema
The relationships are there, even if you don't put them in your schema.
i've got a question, i i have two tables and i want to compare two values for example the PK of the tables, can i to this: "SELECT a.id FROM table1 a, table2 b WHERE a.PK = b.PK" if they are not related by a FK?
@TehShrike i mean if a.PK is 1 and b.PK is one, will that give me the result i want?