RE: Remote Key Question

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Personally I would make

-----Original Message-----
From: Adam Richardson [mailto:simpleshot@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, April 23, 2010 11:09 AM
To: tedd
Cc: PHP eMail List
Subject: Re:  Remote Key Question

On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 12:03 PM, tedd <tedd@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Hi gang:
>
> A few times I've found myself confronted with a problem that might be
> better solved than the way I currently solve it. I would like your
> opinions/solutions as to how you might solve this.
>
> Here's the given (as an article/author example).
>
> I want to create a list of articles in a database.
>
> The articles are listed in a table with the fields "title", "description",
> and "author".
>
> article table:
> id - title - description - author
>
> The authors are listed in a table with the fields "name" and bio".
>
> author table:
> id - name - bio
>
> Now here's the problem each articles will have one, but perhaps more
> authors -- so how do I record the authors in the article table?
>
> As it is now, I use the remote key for each author and separate each key
by
> a comma in the author field of the article table. For example:
>
> author table:
> id - name - bio
> 1 - tedd - tedd's bio
> 2 - Rob - Rob's bio
> 3 - Daniel - Daniel's bio
>
> article table:
> id - title - description - author
> 1 - PHP Beginner - Beginner Topics - 1
> 2 - PHP Intermediate - Intermediate Topics - 1,2
> 3 - PHP Advanced - Advanced Topics - 1,2,3
>
> As such, article with id=3 has a title of " PHP Advanced" and a
description
> of "Advanced Topics" with tedd, Rob, and Daniel as authors.
>
> Is there a better way to link multiple authors to an article rather than
> placing the remote keys in one field and separating them with commas?
>
> Cheers,
>
> tedd
>
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>
Well, because each author can have multiple articles and each article can
have multiple authors, the many-to-many relationship can use a junction
table:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junction_table

In this case articles_authors.

Adam

-- 
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http://nephtaliproject.com


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