What is the best way to save enums into a database?
I know Java provides name() and valueOf() methods to convert enum values into a String and back. But are there any other (flexible) options to store these values?
Is there a smart way to make enums into unique numbers (ordinal() is not safe to use)?
Update
Thanks for all awesome and fast answers! It was as I suspected.
However, a note to toolkit: That is one way. The problem is that I would have to add the same methods to each enum type that I create. That’s a lot of duplicated code and, at the moment, Java does not support any solutions for this (a Java enum cannot extend other classes).
We never store enumerations as numerical ordinal values anymore; it makes debugging and support way too difficult. We store the actual enumeration value converted to string:
and then read back with:
The problem was in the past staring at Enterprise Manager and trying to decipher:
verses
the latter is much easier. The former required getting at the source code and finding the numerical values that were assigned to the enumeration members.
Yes it takes more space, but the enumeration member names are short, and hard drives are cheap, and it is much more worth it to help when you’re having a problem.
Additionally, if you use numerical values, you are tied to them. You cannot nicely insert or rearrange the members without having to force the old numerical values. For example, changing the Suit enumeration to:
would have to become :
in order to maintain the legacy numerical values stored in the database.
How to sort them in the database
The question comes up: lets say i wanted to order the values. Some people may want to sort them by the
enum‘s ordinal value. Of course, ordering the cards by the numerical value of the enumeration is meaningless:That’s not the order we want – we want them in enumeration order:
The same work that is required if you save integer values is required if you save strings:
But that’s not the order we want – we want them in enumeration order:
My opinion is that this kind of ranking belongs in the user interface. If you are sorting items based on their enumeration value: you’re doing something wrong.
But if you wanted to really do that, i would create a
Suitsdimension table:This way, when you want to change your cards to use Kissing Kings New Deck Order you can change it for display purposes without throwing away all your data:
Now we are separating an internal programming detail (enumeration name, enumeration value) with a display setting meant for users: