this post was submitted on 11 Apr 2024
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Programming
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Yes, that's correct. Here's how an entry in the join table looks like:
Fine for prototyping, but adds a scaling tech debt "time bomb" for a live system. Those associations had better be really sparse.
There's certainly the danger of creating too many ad-hoc or sparse relationships, which can cause issues. That said, when used for supplementing foreign keys, Tie-in can be a useful tool in a production system as well.
Don't you want a graph database at this point?
That idea crossed my mind too, but you can’t really use the full capabilities of SQL in graph databases, and that’s a deal breaker for me.
i was thinking the same thing