> Michael Ansley wrote:
>
> Hi, Frank,
>
> This is exactly why there are alternative solutions for trees. The mechanism that you
> are using traded input speed for 'queryability', and this is where you start to run into
> problems. Either you need to store redundant information (i.e.: the level) or you need
> to have a recursive or iterative procedure which steps back up to the top.
>
> Just for illustration, if you were using a node type to indicate the ID of each node
> (say, something like 1, 1.1, 1.2, 1.2.1, etc.) then input into the table would be an
> expensive operation, but querying this would involve only getting out the ID of the node
> that you were at, and splitting up the ID using the periods for separators. So if you
> wanted to traverse up the tree from node 1.2.5.3, (you know that it's at level three
> simply by counting the periods)then the order would be:
>
> 1.2.5.3
> 1.2.5
> 1.2
> 1
It almost looks my very first attempt to do a tree, except that I had the node number not
in one column but a column for each number:
Instead of
1.2.5.3
1.2.5
1.2
1
I had
1|2|5|3
1|2|5|0
1|2|0|0
1|0|0|0
> And you only need the original node ID to do that, which is a single query.
>
> If you are not going to be doing this query often, and/or there are not going to be many
> levels, then you should probably consider the plpgsql solution, as it makes life simple
> for the programmer, and the cost is not really an issue, and you don't have to maintain
> redundant data. Denormalisation is a major pain when you start having to maintain it.
What exactly is the problem with it (are you referring to the scheme I proposed or to the
1.2.3-type scheme)? Actually, I don't really know now why I left my original idea. I guess
it looked to simple.
I think I will stick with my recursive parentid PL/pgSQL-trigger type schema for now. I'll
just have to get into that PL/pgSQL stuff which I haven't properly looked at so far. Would
this be a denormalized table then? The level information would be redundant but linked
with the other columns via the trigger, hence there's nothing much that could go wrong . .
. or is there a hidden maintenance penalty?
Cheers, Frank