jerf 4 hours ago

In a roundabout way this article captures well why I don't really like thinking in terms of "normal forms", especially as a numbered list like that. The key insights are really 1. Avoid redundancy and 2. This may involve synthesizing relationships that don't immediately obviously exist from a human perspective. Both of those can be expanded on at quite some length, but I never found much value in the supposedly-blessed intermediate points represented by the nominally numbered "forms". I don't find them useful either for thinking about the problem or for communicating about it.

Someone, somewhere writing down a list and that list being blessed with the imprimatur of Academic Approval (TM) doesn't mean it is actually useful... sometimes it just means that it made it easy to write multiple choice test questions. (e.g., "What does Layer 2 of the OSI network model represent? A: ... B: ... C: ... D: ..." to which the most appropriate real-world answer is "Who cares?")

  • petalmind 4 hours ago

    > Someone, somewhere writing down a list and that list being blessed with the imprimatur of Academic Approval (TM)

    One problem is that normal forms are underspecified even by the academy.

    E.g., Millist W. Vincent "A corrected 5NF definition for relational database design" (1997) (!) shows that the traditional definition of 5NF was deficient. 5NF was introduced in 1979 (I was one year old then).

    2NF and 3NF should basically be merged into BCNF, if I understand correctly, and treated like a general case (as per Darwen).

    Also, the numeric sequence is not very useful because there are at least four non-numeric forms (https://andreipall.github.io/sql/database-normalization/).

    Also, personally I think that 6NF should be foundational, but that's a separate matter.

    • jerf 4 hours ago

      "1979 (I was one year old then)."

      Well, we are roughly the same age then. Our is a cynical generation.

      "One problem is that normal forms are underspecified even by the academy."

      The cynic in me would say they were doing their job by the example I gave, which is just to provide easy test answers, after which there wasn't much reason to iterate on them. I imagine waiving around normalization forms was a good gig for consultants in the 1980 but I bet even then the real practitioners had a skeptical, arm's length relationship with them.

  • wolttam 3 hours ago

    Why shouldn’t we care about layer 2? You can do really fun and interesting things at the MAC layer.

    • jerf 3 hours ago

      You can do what you do at the MAC layer without any regard for whether or not it is "OSI layer 2", or whether your MAC layer "cheats" and has features that extend into layers 1, or 3, or any other layer. Failing to implement something useful because "that's not what OSI layer 2 is and this is data layer 2 and the OSI model says not to do that" is silly.

      To stay on the main topic, same for the "normalization forms". Do what your database needs.

      The concepts are just attractive nuisances. They are more likely to hurt someone than to help them.

minkeymaniac 2 hours ago

Normalize till it hurts, then denormalize till it works!

  • Quarrelsome 2 hours ago

    what a marvelous motto <3.

    Certainly a lot more concise than the article or the works the article references.

    • petalmind 2 hours ago

      Imperative mood "normalize" assumes that you had something not-normalized before you received that instruction. It's not useful when your table design strategy is already normalization-preserving, such as the most basic textbook strategy (a table per anchor, a column per attribute or 1:N link, a 2-column table per M:N link).

      And this is basically the main point of my critique of 4NF and 5NF. They both traditionally present an unexplained table that is supposed to be normalized. But it's not clear where does this original structure come from. Why are its own authors not aware about the (arguably, quite simple) concept of normalization?

      It's like saying that to in order to implement an algorithm you have to remove bugs from its original implementation — where does this implementation come from?

      The other side of this coin is that lots of real-world design have a lot of denormalized representations that are often reasonably-well engineered.

      Because of that if you, as a novice, look at a typical production schema, and you have this "thou shalt normalize" instruction, you'll be confused.

      This is my big teaching pet peeve.

      • Quarrelsome 2 hours ago

        > But it's not clear where does this original structure come from. Why are its own authors not aware about the (arguably, quite simple) concept of normalization?

        I find the bafflement expressed in the article as well as the one linked extremely attractive. It made both a joy to read.

        Were I to hazard a guess: Might it be a consequence of lack of disk space in those early decades, resulting into developers being cautious about defining new tables and failing to rationalise that the duplication in their tragic designs would result in more space wasted?

        > The other side of this coin is that lots of real-world design have a lot of denormalized representations that are often reasonably-well engineered.

        Agreed, but as the OP comment stated they usually started out normalised and then pushed out denormalised representations for nice contiguous reads.

        As a victim of maintaining a stack on top of an EAV schema once upon a time, I have great appreciation for contiguous reads.

        • petalmind 2 hours ago

          > Might it be a consequence of lack of disk space in those early decades

          A plausible explanation of "normalization as a process" was actually found in https://www.cargocultcode.com/normalization-is-not-a-process... ("So where did it begin?").

          I hope someday to find some technical report of migrating to the relational database, from around that time.

          • Quarrelsome 1 hour ago

            > Normalization-as-process makes sense in a specific scenario: When converting a hierarchical database model into a relational model.

            That makes much more sense as reasoning.

            If I can also offer a second hazard of guess. I used to work in embedded in the 2000's and it was absolutely insane how almost all of the eldy architects and developers would readily accept some fixed width file format for data storage over a sensible solution that offered out of the box transactionality and relational modelling like Sqlite. This creates a mindset where each datastore is effectively siloed and must contain all the information to perform the operation, potentially leading to these denormalised designs.

            Bit weird, given that was from the waterfall era, implying that the "Big Design Up Front" wasn't actually doing any real thinking about modelling up front. But I've been in that room and I think a lot of it was cargo cult. To deal with the insanity of simple file I/O as data, I had to write a rudimentary atomicity system from scratch in order to fix the dumb corruption issues of their design when I would have got that for free with Sqlite.

Quarrelsome 2 hours ago

Especially loved the article linked that was dissing down formal definitions of 4NF.

cremer 1 hour ago

The numbered forms are most useful as a teaching device, not an engineering specification. Once you have internalized 2NF and 3NF violations through a few painful bugs, you start spotting partial and transitive dependencies by feel rather than by running through definitions. The forms gave you the vocabulary. The bugs gave you the instinct..

estetlinus 5 hours ago

The lost art of normalizing databases. ”Why is the ARR so high on client X? Oh, we’re counting it 11 times lol”.

I would maybe throw in date as an key too. Bad idea?

  • hilariously 1 hour ago

    It depends on if you are doing OLTP (granular, transactional) vs OLAP (fact/date based aggregates) - dates are generally not something you'd consider in a fully normalized flow to uniqify records.

iFire 3 hours ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essential_tuple_normal_form is cool!

Since I had bad memory, I asked the ai to make me a mnemonic:

* Every

* Table

* Needs

* Full-keys (in its joins)

akdev1l 2 hours ago

My brain has been blunted too far due to dynamodb and NoSQL storage usage and now I can’t even normalize anymore

tadfisher 5 hours ago

I love reading about the normal forms, because it makes me sound like I know what I'm talking about in the conversation where the backend folks tell me, "if we normalized that data then the database would go down". This is usually followed by arguments over UUID versions for some reason.

  • necovek 5 hours ago

    So which normal form do they argue for and against? And what UUID version wins the argument?

    • Tostino 5 hours ago

      Not OP, but UUID v7 is what you want for most database workloads (other than something like Spanner)

      • tossandthrow 3 hours ago

        I use the null uuid as primary key - never had any DB scaling issues.

        • petalmind 2 hours ago

          Yeah, no NULL is ever equal to any other NULL, so they are basically unique.

          • Groxx 2 hours ago

            You are also guaranteed to be able to retrieve your data, just query for '... is null'. No complicated logic needed!

      • RedShift1 2 hours ago

        Me still using bigints... Which haven't given me any problems. Wouldn't use it for client generated IDs but that is not what most applications require anyway.

    • tadfisher 4 hours ago

      Explaining jokes is poor form.

      • culi 4 hours ago

        On the internet it is normal.

      • necovek 2 hours ago

        This was an attempt to extend jokes and not ask for explanation: there are a number of normal forms, and people usually talk about "normalization" without being specific thus conflating all of them; out of 7 UUID versions, only 2 generally make sense for use today depending on whether you need time-incrementing version or not.

DeathArrow 5 hours ago

There are use cases where is better to not normalize the data.

  • andrew_lettuce 5 hours ago

    Typically it's better to take normalized data and denormalize for your use case vs. not normalize in the first place. Really depends on your needs

    • jghn 4 hours ago

      Over time I’ve developed a philosophy of starting roughly around 3NF and adjusting as the project evolves. Usually this means some parts of the db get demoralize and some get further normalized

      • skeeter2020 3 hours ago

        >> Usually this means some parts of the db get demoralize

        I largely agree with your practical approach, but try and keep the data excited about the process, sell the "new use cases for the same data!" angle :)

  • petalmind 4 hours ago

    One day I hope to write about denormalization, explained explicitly via JOINs.

    • andrii 2 hours ago

      Please do, you content is great!

  • abirch 4 hours ago

    I'm a fan of the sushi principle: raw data is better than cooked data.

    Each process should take data from a golden source and not a pre-aggregated or overly normalized non-authorative source.

    • layer8 4 hours ago

      Sometimes the role of your system is to be the authoritative source of data that it has aggregated, validated, and canonicalized.

      • abirch 3 hours ago

        This is great. Then I would consider the aggreated, validated, and canonicalized source as a Golden Source. Where I've seen issues is that someone starts to query from a nonauthoritative source because they know about it, instead of going upstream to a proper source.

  • bob1029 4 hours ago

    JSON is extremely fast these days. Gzipped JSON perhaps even more so.

    I find that JSON blobs up to about 1 megabyte are very reasonable in most scenarios. You are looking at maybe a millisecond of latency overhead in exchange for much denser I/O for complex objects. If the system is very write-intensive, I would cap the blobs around 10-100kb.

    • Quarrelsome 2 hours ago

      I adore contiguous reads that ideas like that yield. I'd rather push that out to a read-only end point, then getting sucked into the entropy of treating what is effectively an unschema-ed blob into editable data.