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Episode 14 – Databases the SQL [see-kwuhl]

Welcome back for part 2 of the podcast about databases.  In this half, we discuss several of the things we believe that developers should know about databases.  From joins to unions, group by's and indexing, we try to touch on a lot of the items that most developers should at least be familiar with when working with database systems.   News Attended Build Guild Atlanta, a social gathering of developers who were talking shop in a relaxed, casual atmosphere. http://atlanta.buildguild.org/ Met at a place called the Joystick Gamebar - apparently has some insanely good french fries: http://joystickgamebar.com/ dotPeek decompiler http://www.jetbrains.com/decompiler/ Decompile AND Debug code that's not even your own! Make sure if you're hosting in "The Cloud", ensure that you've secured and backed up your assets as best as you can. Use multi-factor authentication if possible Use strong passwords Backup (maybe outside the cloud) http://www.codespaces.com/ OWASP Meetup - OWASP Mobile Vulnerabilities http://www.meetup.com/OWASP-Atlanta/ Checkout the Security Now Podcast https://www.grc.com/securitynow.htm Another 5 star review in iTunes!!!  Be the next one! Huge thanks to Skinner_MW http://www.codingblocks.net/iTunes Some fantastic feedback from Jim Basilio on Java and Springboot in response to Episode 12 http://www.codingblocks.net/podcast/episode-12-what-do-you-want-to-be-when-you-grow-up-define-me/#comment-1492256782 Tron Anderson left an excellent comment in Episode 13 regarding various ways to do the recursive queries.  Must read for people looking how to query parent-child tables effectively http://www.codingblocks.net/podcast/all-your-database-are-belong-to-us/#comment-1492256938 Database Basics, and Maybe a TOUCH of Advanced Stuff CROSS JOIN - cartesian product of two tables - every row in table 1 matched up with every row in table 2 Careful!  Doing this on large tables could crash your server! INNER JOIN - where the only rows you get back is when the data in table 1 matches the data in table 2 on the join conditions Outer Joins - LEFT OUTER, RIGHT OUTER, FULL OUTER LEFT OUTER will return all records from the table on the left side of the join and any data that matches in the right table, otherwise the data in the right table will be nulled RIGHT OUTER will return all records from the table on the right side of the join and any data that matches in the left table, otherwise the data in the left table will be nulled FULL OUTER will return all data from both tables with the data that's common between the two tables fully filled in, otherwise, the data that's missing from each side will be nulled Database Normalization http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_normalization Checkout @SqlKris on Twitter - runs a database blog on learning SQL and very helpful in responding to questions on Twitter https://twitter.com/sqlkris Refactoring databases can be very difficult - usually means refactoring a lot of application code, not to mention any stored procedures, views, etc that may live in the database Outlaw is still 21.... Do you put your data interactions in a stored procedure or do you put that code in an application? Pros would be that you've centralized your database "logic" Where this doesn't work - if you need data from other systems and using linked servers is not an option You can join tables across databases (at least in SQL Server) Cardinality - one to one or one to many To subtype or not to subtype a table? If you decide to do this, you could have hundreds of tables and managing this through your application could be a major pain...but, the performance would be outstanding If you don't do subtypes but you do the EAV route (Entity Attribute Value schema), it's easier to maintain but query performance wouldn't be as good as the subtyping http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entity%E2%80%93attribute%E2%80%93value_model

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