I'm working on redesigning some parts of our schema, and I'm running into a problem where I just don't know a good clean way of doing something. I have an event table such as:
Events
--------
event_id
for each event, there could be n groups or users associated with it. So there's a table relating Events to Users to reflect that one to many relationship such as:
EventUsers
----------
event_id
user_id
The problem is that we also have a concept of groups. We want to potentially tie n groups to an event in addition to users. So, that user_id column isn't sufficient, because we need to store potentially either a user_id or a group_id.
I've thought of a variety of ways to handle this, but they all seem like a big hack. For example, I could make that a participant_id and put in a participant_type column such as:
EventUsers
----------
event_id
participant_id
participant_type
and if I wanted to get the events that user_id 10 was a part of, it could be something like:
select event_id
from EventUsers
where participant_id = 10
and participant_type = 1
(assuming that somewhere participant_type 1 was defined to be a User). But I don't like that from a philosophical point of view because when I look at the data, I don't know what the number in participant_id means unless I also look at the value in particpant_type.
I could also change EventUsers to be something like:
EventParticipants
-----------------
event_id
user_id
group_id
and allow the values of user_id and group_id to be NULL if that record is dealing with the other type of information.
Of course, I could just break EventUsers and we'll call it EventGroups into 2 different tables but I'd like to keep who is tied to an event stored in one single place if there's a good logical way to do it.
So, am I overlooking a good way to accomplish this?
event_id, group_id. A single user could be in a group that contains only that user. At least that feels a bit cleaner in some ways. – Wiseguy Aug 17 '11 at 23:58