Re: Q: data modeling with inheritance - Mailing list pgsql-general

From David Fetter
Subject Re: Q: data modeling with inheritance
Date
Msg-id 20090703182945.GA17450@fetter.org
Whole thread Raw
In response to Q: data modeling with inheritance  (Reece Hart <reece@harts.net>)
Responses Re: Q: data modeling with inheritance
List pgsql-general
On Thu, Jul 02, 2009 at 01:54:04PM -0700, Reece Hart wrote:
> This is a question about data modeling with inheritance and a way to
> circumvent the limitation that primary keys are not inherited.

I'm missing what you're doing here that foreign keys don't cover.
Could you send along your DDL?

Just generally, I've only found table inheritance useful for
partitioning.  "Polymorphic" foreign key constraints can be handled
other ways such as the one sketched out below.

http://archives.postgresql.org/sfpug/2005-04/msg00022.php

Cheers,
David.

>
> I'm considering a project to model genomic variants and their associated
> phenotypes. (Phenotype is a description of the observable trait, such as
> disease or hair color.) There are many types of variation, many types of
> phenotypes, and many types of association. By "type", I mean that they
> have distinct structure (column names and inter-row dependencies).  The
> abstract relations might look like this:
>
>   variant              association                phenotype
>   -------              -----------                ---------
>   variant_id --------- variant_id        +------- phenotype_id
>   genome_id            phenotype_id -----+        short_descr
>   strand               origin_id (i.e., who)      long_descr
>   start_coord          ts (timestamp)
>   stop_coord
>
>
> There are several types of variants, such as insertions, deletions,
> inversions, copy-number variants, single nucleotide polymorphisms,
> translocations, and unknowable future genomic shenanigans.
>
> Phenotypes might come from ontologies or controlled vocabularies that
> need a graph structure, others domains might be free text.  Each is
> probably best-served by a subclass table.
>
> Associations might be quantitative or qualitative, and would come from
> multiple origins.
>
> The problem that arises is the combinatorial nature of the schema design
> coupled with the lack of inherited primary keys.  In the current state
> of PG, one must (I think) make joining tables (association subclasses)
> for every combination of referenced foreign keys (variant and phenotype
> subclasses).
>
> So, how would you model this data?  Do I ditch inheritance?
>
> Thanks,
> Reece
>
>
>
>
>
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--
David Fetter <david@fetter.org> http://fetter.org/
Phone: +1 415 235 3778  AIM: dfetter666  Yahoo!: dfetter
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