• @[email protected]
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    151 year ago

    It’s an English literacy thing - we have several non-native English speakers and using only singular avoids making those folks’ lives harder. Besides it’s really nice to autopilot that categoryid is a foreign key to the category table. It also simplifies always plural words… I haven’t yet written CREATE TABLE pants but if I ever do there’s zero chance of me creating a pantid.

    • @eek2121
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      111 year ago

      no underscores either? What are we, apes?

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        I tend to use underscores on join tables so table foo_bar would have a fooid and a barid. I have somewhat soured on this approach though since there are a lot of situations where you’ll have two m-m relationships between the same two tables with a different meaning… and having a fixed formula for m-m tables can make things ugly.

        If I get to design another greenfield database I’ll probably prefer using underscores for word boundaries in long table names.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      I always thought they should be singular to be closer to the names we give entities and relations in a entity-relation diagram.