I'm developing a system using Ruby on Rails (with ActiveRecord) and postgres. (Although I think my question is still relevant for, say, java with hibernate.)

I have two classes (tables): users and employees. A user is an account that can logon to the system, while an employee is...umm...an employee.

When someone is logged in, they will want to run queries like, "give me a list of my accounts". This means I need to link the users table with the employees table.
From a business rules perspective:
  Some users are not employees (like an admin user)
  Some employees are not users

I can think of two ways to do this:

1) a 1-1 relationship where the user table contains a FK to the employee table. Since not all users will be employees, the FK will sometimes be null. In rails, the user class would "belong_to employee" while employee "has_one user".

2) Create a link table that has FKs to both the user and employee table. This make sense because I'm not sure that the concept of "there might be a linked employee" belongs in the user table. This moves it to a separate table designed for that purpose. But then again, it may just be a needless extra table.

Would you prefer one solution over the other?

---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ?

              http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq

Reply via email to