I’m building a website that lets people create vocabulary lessons. When a lesson is created, a news items is created that references the lesson. When another user practices the lesson, the user also stores a reference to it together with the practice result.
My question is what to do when a user decides to remove the lesson?
The options I’ve considered are:
- Actually delete the lesson from
the database and remove all
referencing news items, practise
results etc. - Just flag it as deleted and
exclude the link from referencing
news items, results etc.
What are your thoughts? Should data never be removed, ala Facebook? Should references be avoided all together?
By the way, I’m using Google App Engine (python/datastore). A db.ReferenceProperty is not set to None when the referenced object is deleted as far as I can see?
Thanks!
Where changes to data need to be audited, marking data as deleted (aka “soft deletes”) helps greatly particularly if you record the user that actioned the delete and the time when it occurred. It also allows data to be “un-deleted” very easily.
Having said that there is no reason to prevent “hard deletes” (where data is actually deleted) as an administrative function to help tidy up mistakes.