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Home/ Questions/Q 8181361
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T00:29:46+00:00 2026-06-07T00:29:46+00:00

I’m using a standard SQL database and I’m trying to figure out whether or

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I’m using a standard SQL database and I’m trying to figure out whether or not to flatten a table or make it more “object-oriented”. To me, smaller tables are easier to read but it would require joining tables and having one-to-one relationships. Is this generally a good way of doing things or is it frowned on in the SQL world?

I have a table which has the following attributes:

MYTABLE
- ID
- NAME
- LABEL
- CREATED_TS
- MODIFIED_TS
- CREATED_USER
- MODIFIED_USER

To me, the created/modified fields would be their own object. There are actually a few more fields as well so it’s not really just this small. I would think that creating another table called “MYTABLE_MODINFO” or something like that which would have the CREATED and MODIFIED fields and they would be joined when data from them was needed. These tables aren’t high access tables, they wouldn’t have tons of queries per minute or even hundreds of rows in them, so I don’t think efficiency would be much of an issue.

So mainly what I’m wondering is would this be a generally accepted design or should you generally keep your table structures flat?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T00:29:48+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 12:29 am

    You should create audit information in the same table. The reason is that this data is part of the row and is a one to one relationship, so there is no point in branching it apart.

    If you want to store the audit info (audit tracking/history), then you can create another table, however in most cases I have seen this built by “duplicating” data and creating a surrogate key and mappings back to the original row. The reason I list duplicating in quotes is because auditing inherently requires duplication of the old data…if it is linked and changeable after being written, then it is not really an audit.

    Just my two cents. If it does not make sense, then I can provide some examples. But, the gist is that each row will only ever have one current piece of modification information, so why break it out if it will never have more than one?

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