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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T12:30:22+00:00 2026-05-12T12:30:22+00:00

I have 4 subclasses: Video , Image , Note , and Form . Each

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I have 4 subclasses: Video, Image, Note, and Form. Each one contains different types of data. For example, the Image class contains a path to the image file on disk and image properties, and the Form class contains the form field values. The common element between each item, however, is the GPS coordinates and heading, so I have the following abstract base class:

public abstract class Content
{
    public float? Latitude { get; set; }
    public float? Longitude { get; set; }
    public float? Heading { get; set; }
}

However, where I get hazy is on how to model this in a database. Currently I have a table called Events (for the sake of example, let’s say an event is a birthday party) and 4 tables (Videos, Images, Notes, and Forms). Each table has a foreign key linking back to Events‘ primary key.

Using LINQ-to-SQL, I get 5 classes for each table. This is fine if I only want one type of data, for example Event.Images, but what I want to do is count the total number of ‘contents’ an Event has and get the GPS coordinates. I can wing the count easy enough by just using Event.Images.Count() + Event.Videos.Count() + ..., but I can’t do the same for the GPS coordinates. Is there some way I can model the database so that I can use a base class for every item and still be able to get the individual strongly-typed item when I need to see its data?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T12:30:23+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 12:30 pm

    There are three different patterns for this documented in Martin Fowler’s Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture, each with different trade-offs:

    • Single Table Inheritance
    • Class Table Inheritance
    • Concrete Table Inheritance
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