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07:00 - 12:0012:00 - 15:00

12:00
one would be:
course(course_id, name)
it would have entries like
(1, gmat_math)
(2, gmat_verbal)
i would call it courses, thoug (it was a typo)
then you need another table:
questions(course_id,qid,subid,chpid,ques,ans1,ans2...)
and one table
contents(course_id,id,subid,chpid,sec_name,content)
course_id in questions and contents is a foreign key to course_id in courses
this way, you have 3 tables for n courses, your way would be 2n tables for n courses
so
instead of what you have now:
if table_name = "gmat"
gmat(subid,chpid,qtype,explanation...)
you can simply do
contents("gmat",subid,chpid,qtype,explanation...)
got it?
pKs
pKs
yes sir
:)
ok but as I have to argue with another guy
what would be the point
not to create table par subject
and table per subject per questions and per content
what do we save
does it optimize the queries.
is it a better design approach.
facts if someone ask.
what
much better design approach
easier to write queries
simplifies sync
easier to debug
following scenario:
you have 100 courses
now you want to add some information
your approach:
have to edit 200 tables
my approach
edit 2 tables
by add information I mean something that needs new columns
nicer code
notice, i need one line for query
you need many:
if course = gmat_math
select from table gmat_math
else if course = gmat_abc
select from table gmat_abc
pKs
pKs
12:15
to fetch from a table with 100000000 records won't be expensive then to fetch from a table with 1000 records
??
just a question
that's 100 million?
pKs
pKs
yes
one more thing content column would have around 1000 lines of data in form of html
if you have a good index, it will still be slower, but that will be unnoticable, given the fact that it's faster overall by avoiding the table selection
pKs
pKs
would it be ok to store that much data.
it's not how i would do it
pKs
pKs
12:17
then.
i would store a filename
pKs
pKs
on a file server and refernce its location or path in db
and have that file in memory
pKs
pKs
right.
??
so reading a file would be faster then reading content from db column?
if the file is in memory already there will no noticable speed difference
but don't bloat your db with that much filecontent
don't load the file from disk, as it will be slower
(unless you have an SSD)
but even then, directly from memory will be faster
pKs
pKs
12:20
what memory we are talking about?
RAM
main memory
pKs
pKs
ok
how would I get the file to memory all the time.
memCaching
?
that is a pretty general question
it depends how many there are, and how big they are
pKs
pKs
what is the consequence of bloating the db with much of file content.
in a smaller project i worked on, we had enough memory to just read them to a java string
consequence: difficult to change the content
pKs
pKs
12:23
not possible in this case
keeping static references.
let's say you find a typo, how would you fix it if it's in the db
pKs
pKs
update command
sql
:(
wouldn't it be easier to just edit text in a text editor??? :D
also, db can handle it's internal data layout for better efficiency if it's not bloated by dynamic length content
but that won't be noticeable, either
also, update command is complicated with 1000 lines content
because you also have to escape things that sql would interpret
just save the filename in the db
I'm sure you'll find a way to keep the files in memory for faster access
pKs
pKs
12:42
would it make the application fast
because now when I click on a button it takes a few seconds to load then next content page
12:59
i don't know, it depends on what the current bottleneck of your app is
pKs
pKs
using the db structured that I we have discussed does it make a differece
that depends on how much time you currently invest to determine the right table
if that's longer than the avg. table lookup, then yes, it would speed things up
pKs
pKs
so as a pointer I can keep it
that looking for a table in db takes more time
to really speed things up, you have to find the bottleneck
pKs
pKs
I will do that
13:09
wait, yes
it will speed things up
because right now you have 2 db lookups
one that finds out the table name
and one doing the actual lookup
that would be one single lookup with my db design
so yes, it would be definitely be faster
pKs
pKs
to search for 1000 rows takes more time or 3 tables with 100 rows.
one by one.
querying one large (many rows) table is quicker than 3 queries to small (few rows) tables
that's what DBs are for
or else, we could just use flat files
pKs
pKs
but people obviously say flat files are the fastest way to access things
that is what google do
all flat files
no no no no no no no no
pKs
pKs
someone told me.
13:13
Can't be more wrong
with a DB you can and should use indexes
not possible with a flat file
pKs
pKs
right.
IMHO
google uses BigTable
it's their own database
you can read about it, they publish research papers on that topic
pKs
pKs
but using hadoop they make some hot files
i don't know
this stuff.
sure they access some stuff by files, also
pKs
pKs
why are they doing this if they can do it all using indexes
:|
13:19
different use cases, different tools
google does a lot of stuff ;)
pKs
pKs
hmm right
AFAIK , I should work on db concepts as well
:(
one issue currently i am having is
foldername/file.csv
how do I escape / and reach file.csv
resolved..
stackoverflow
cheers.
pKs
pKs
13:59
hey..
one more suggestion , If I change the web db structure now
what about the existing db.
any suggestion for that
data is important
you'll have to write a program
that reads from old tables and inserts into new tables
once it's done
and you verified the data integrity of the new tables
you can solely use the new oe
ones
and delete the old ones
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