I’m experiencing my first mysql INSERT tests and I’m using these tables:
table employees
-> employee_id
-> employee_name
-> employee_surname
-> employee_url
table areas
-> area_id
-> area_city
-> area_address
-> area_country
table agencies
-> agency_id
-> agency_name
-> agency_url
table node_employees
-> node_id
-> employee_id
-> area_id
-> agency_id
I would store data in table_employee, table_areas and table_agency but I’m not forced to save all the data simultaneously, so I could create an employee, and subsequently an agency or an address.
In a case of singular data insert, should I use something like this or shoud I use directly the table node_employees, if yes, how can I do it?
INSERT INTO employees (employee_name, employee_surname, employee_url)
VALUES ('Roger', 'Waters', 'http://pinkfloyd.com')
INSERT INTO agencies (agency_name, agency_url)
VALUES ('Google', 'http://google.com')
INSERT INTO areas (area_city, area_address, area_country)
VALUES ('Rome', 'Via Roma, 123', 'Italy')
To link rows each other I’ve created node_employees, a relational table.
I use it to link an employee with an area or an agency, so what I should do to link data with this relational table?
SELECT employee_id FROM employees WHERE employee_name = 'Roger'
SELECT agency_id FROM agencies WHERE agency_name = 'Google'
// I'll get their ids in php
$php_employee_id
$php_agency_id
// and then
INSERT INTO node_employees (employee_id, agency_id)
VALUES ('$php_employee_id', '$php_agency_id')
I have also another doubt, what I should do if I need to link an employee with an area? shoud I use a different query, so a query for every possibility?
// so, not this
$php_employee_id = 12;
$php_agency_id = 7;
$php_area_id = null;
INSERT INTO node_employees (employee_id, agency_id, area_id)
VALUES ('$php_employee_id', '$php_agency_id', '$php_area_id') // will this remove the previous data with null in area_id?
That should be two tables – one for relating employees to agencies, and a separate one for relating employees to areas. You haven’t mentioned anything relating agencies to areas, giving the impression they are independent of one another…
Regardless, the
node_employees.employee_idshould be a foreign key toEMPLOYEES.employee_id, in order to ensure that the employee must already exist as a valid value in the system. Likewise for theagency_idbetweennode_employeesandagenciestables.Because of those relationships, values have to exist in the
EMPLOYEESandAGENCIEStables before they exist in theNODE_EMPLOYEEStable. That makes theNODE_EMPLOYEEStable in a “child” relationship with the other two tables, so your three INSERT statements would have to insert into the parents before the child, and use the values from the parents in the child.