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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 19, 20262026-05-19T23:49:29+00:00 2026-05-19T23:49:29+00:00

How do we best represent a parent child relationship where the child has its

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How do we best represent a parent child relationship where the child has its own settings, the parent has its own but the parent can overwrite the child?

My usecase is privacy level for photo album. Each album and each photo has a privacy level. So if album = custom then each photo can have different privacy level. But ofcourse if album is set to ‘friends only’ then the photos cannot be public, so any photo that is public is overwritten to private. Or if album is set to ‘network only’ then friends can see it but public cannot.

I am not sure if this is handled via application logic or through schema. If via application logic then do i need ‘ANY’ colunm in these tables for this or is it 100% application side?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-19T23:49:30+00:00Added an answer on May 19, 2026 at 11:49 pm

    You could have a permissions hierarchy, 0 – public, 1 – network, 2 – friends, 3 – self. Both albums and photos would have a permissions field in the database, but the permissions for photos always have to be >= permissions for the album they’re in. By default they’d be equal to album permissions.

    This way you could have a network-only album with some friends-only and some self-only photos.

    Thus, the information about permissions for each object would be stored in the database, but the application would control which permissions can be set for photos and, of course, who gets to see what album/photo based on the permissions of the object and the status/position of the visitor.

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