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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T07:22:09+00:00 2026-05-12T07:22:09+00:00

At my company, we save each database object (stored proc, view, etc) as an

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At my company, we save each database object (stored proc, view, etc) as an individual SQL file, and place them under source control that way.

Up until now, we’ve had a very flat storage model in our versioned file structure:

  • DatabaseProject
    • Functions
      • (all functions here; no further nesting)
    • StoredProcedures
      • (all stored procs in here; no further nesting)
    • Views
      • (ditto)

For a big new project, another idea has occurred to me: why not store these files by subject instead of in these prefab flat lists?

For example:

  • DatabaseProject
    • Reports
      • (individual stored procs, views, etc.)
      • SpecificReport
        • (more objects here, further nesting as necessary)
    • SpecificApplication
      • (all types of DB objects, with arbitrarily deep nesting)
    • et cetera….

The obvious flaw is that this folder structure doesn’t impose any kind of namespace hierarchy on the database objects; it’s for organization only. Thus, it would be very easy to introduce objects with duplicate names. You’d need some kind of build tool to survey the database project and die on naming conflicts.

What I’d like to know is: has anyone tried this method of organizing SQL files by application subject in their versioned file structure? Was it worth it? Did you create a build tool that would police the project as I have described?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T07:22:10+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 7:22 am

    I like to have my SQL scripts organized by topics, rather than by name. As a rule, I even group related items into single files. The main advantages of this are :

    • You do not clutter your filesystem/IDE with files (many of them being a few lines long).
    • The overall database structure shows more directly.

    ON the other hand, it may be more difficult to find the source code related to a specific object…

    As for duplicate names : it can never happen, because you obviously have automated scripts to build your database. Relying on your filesystem for this is looking for trouble…

    As a conclusion, I would say that your current rules are much better than no rule at all.

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