I have a cms which stores comments against articles. These comments can be both threaded and non threaded. Although technically they are the same just with the reply column left blank when it's not threaded. My application works on sqlLite, MySQL and pgsql so I need fairly standard SQL.
I currently have a comment table
comment_id
article_id
user_id
comment
timestamp
thread (this is the reply column)
My question is to figure out how to best represent the threaded comments in the database. Perhaps in a separate table that supports the tree set without the content and a simple table to hold the text? Perhaps in the way it already is? Perhaps another way?
If the comments are un-threaded I can easily just order by the timestamp.
If they are threaded I sort like this
ORDER BY SUBSTRING(c.thread, 1, (LENGTH(c.thread) - 1))
As you can see from the ORDER BY, the commenting queries will not ever use an index as function based indexes only really live in Oracle. Help me have lightening fast comment pages.
Actually, it has to be a balance between read and write.
If you are OK with updating a bunch of rows on every insert, then nested set (or an equivalent) will give you easy, fast reads.
Other than that, a simple FK on the parent will give you ultra-simple insert, but might well be a nightmare for retrieval.
I think I'd go with the nested sets, but be careful about the expected data volume and usage patterns (updating several, maybe a lot of, rows on two indexed columns (for left and right info) for every insert might be a problem at some point).
I know the answer is a bit late, but for tree data use a closure table http://www.slideshare.net/billkarwin/models-for-hierarchical-data
It describes 4 methods:
The last option has advantages of easy CRUD operations compared to the rest. The cost is space, which is O(n^2) size in the number tree nodes in the worst case, but probably not so bad in practice.
I really like how Drupal solves this problem. It assigns a thread id to each comment. This id starts at 1 for the first comment. If a reply is added to this comment, the id
1.1
is assigned to it. A reply to comment1.1
is given the thread id1.1.1
. A sibling of comment1.1
is given the thread id1.2
. You get the idea. Calculating these thread ids can be done easily with one query when a comment is added.When the thread is rendered, all of the comments that belong to the thread are fetched in a single query, sorted by the thread id. This gives you the threads in the ascending order. Furthermore, using the thread id, you can find the nesting level of each comment, and indent it accordingly.
There are a few issues to sort out:
Drupal solves the first issue in a more complicated way using a numbering system called vancode. As for the second issue, it is solved by appending a backslash (whose ASCII code is higher than digits) to thread ids when sorting by descending order. You can find more details about this implementation by checking the source code of the comments module (see the big comment before the function comment_get_thread).
I just did this myself, actually! I used the nested set model of representing hierarchical data in a relational database.
Managing Hierarchical Data in MySQL was pure gold for me. Nested sets are the second model described in that article.
You've got a choice between the adjacency and the nested set models. The article Managing Hierarchical Data in MySQL makes for a nice introduction.
For a theoretical discussion, see Celko's Trees and Hierarchies.
It's rather easy to implement a threaded list if your database supports windowing functions. All you need is a recursive reference in your target database table, such as:
You can then use a recursive Common Table Expression to display a threaded view. An example is available here.
Unfortunately, the pure SQL methods to do it are quite slow.
The
NESTED SETS
proposed by@Marc W
are quite elegant but they may require updating the whole tree if your tree branches hit the ranges, which can be quite slow.See this article in my blog on how to do it fast in
MySQL
:Oracle
'sCONNECT BY
You'll need to create a function:
and use it in a query like this:
This is of course
MySQL
specific but it's real fast.If you want this to be portable betwen
PostgreSQL
andMySQL
, you can usePostgreSQL
's contrib forCONNECT BY
and wrap the query into a stored procedure with same name for both systems.