sorry I don't see how Christian answer was serious brushing me off with few classes to
insert into EAV. granted the way I landed this on you deserves such a reply but can we
skip to the serious phase.
well spotted that I am talking about a deep level of dynamic. Serveral domains not just
the medical field have thousands of objects with subsets needed in different
circumstances. some domains use domain specific languages with runtimes to interpret
content. There are many reasons why you can't map objects to tables at design time.
There are many other reasons why you can't have a static domain model. I am not here
to argue the problem but explore the solution with you.
do I have your ears?
Max Rydahl Andersen <max.andersen(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Christians answer was actually serious ;)
My background is medical systems and both HL7, GEPJ and the european
DH
has a great deal of genericity because the medical domain has it...but I
don't see how it requires
the level of dynamicity you are referring too.
/max
very funny. I had similar skepticism until I worked in such domain.
I
understand the issues surrounding such a model, I spent 15 years working
for Oracle. implementing it is not that trivial. there is a real need
and I explain the details if I have more serious replies.
Christian Bauer wrote:
On Apr 30, 2007, at 9:48 PM, Iyad Elian wrote:
> alternative persistence model common in some domains like the medical
> domain. how do I go about it?
So data consistency and integrity is not important in the medical
domain and the EAV stuff is used as the main model for data
management? I can't believe that. EAV is just a synonym for "I don't
like to think about data management and schema evolution, therefore
let me break it right away in the design phase." Of course, it has
its uses but it's rare to see it applied properly.
Implementing an EAV pattern on top of Hibernate is trivial. Attached
some source you may use if you promise never to design a system with
this that runs my pacemaker.
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--
--
Max Rydahl Andersen
callto://max.rydahl.andersen
Hibernate
max(a)hibernate.org
http://hibernate.org
JBoss a division of Red Hat
max.andersen(a)jboss.com
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Check outnew cars at Yahoo! Autos.