« first day (2311 days earlier)      last day (347 days later) » 

04:53
@TehShrike, Ok I'll be back I will ask them
05:31
Hello Guys, I have table in database which content youtube video-id records - approx 10,000
I have to create guest user who can only access video uploaded older 2007 year and less(10% of video from table)
can i create such user who only can access 10% of videos?
I am using phpmyadmin
 
3 hours later…
08:53
Hello Guys,

Which database and database engine used when get search result with different criteria like search with address or some string of the address. there are many other fields are available for search criteria
Please suggest me your input for same
 
6 hours later…
15:07
@Sandeep hmm, you might be able to make a view table that contains those records
and then give the other database user the ability to read only from that view table
@Jaymin ElasticSearch is a good option. Based on your question I'm assuming you need fulltext indexing.
 
1 hour later…
16:33
@TehShrike, in my item table is it okay to put supplier_id ?
I am confuse in creating the item table
CREATE TABLE `items` (
  `id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
  `item_id` varchar(191) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
  `upceanisbn` varchar(191) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
  `name` varchar(191) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
  `maxsize` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
  `reorderlevel` int(11) NOT NULL,
  `itemimage` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
  `category_id` smallint(6) NOT NULL,
  `subcategory_id` smallint(6) NOT NULL,
  `supplier_id` smallint(6) NOT NULL,
also I have question is using smallint is okay in my foreign key like the category_id ?
 
2 hours later…
18:23
@jemz do you have a supplier table that the column is linking to?
@jemz here's the docs on integer types in MySQL: dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/integer-types.html
you should use UNSIGNED unless you specifically need to store negative numbers (which you shouldn't for foreign keys or primary keys)
I would recommend imagining the largest possible number of items that any future customer could ever have, over decades of using the software
and then use the data type that can handle an order of magnitude more values than that
So say, categories. Maybe you can imagine some customer using 10,000 categories at some point in the future. It's way more than you'd think, but it could theoretically happen for users with specific business requirements that cause them to use a lot of categories, if they used the software for a long time
So, you should pick not the data type that can handle that number, but can handle an order of magnitude more. So maybe MEDIUMINT in this theoretical example

« first day (2311 days earlier)      last day (347 days later) »