I am wondering how should I save authors (in case where there are more than one author) in simple database.
In case one one book has one authors, everything is easy. The
Get rid of the authors
column in books
.
You have a many to many relationship between books and authors: some books have multiple authors, and some authors wrote more than one book. And, books have first, second, and third authors, and so forth. You don't get to render the author names for a book in some unpredictable order. The authors and the publisher decide the author order, not the dbms programmer.
So, you need a books_authors
table with the following columns
book_id
author_id
author_ordinal (a number like 1,2,3 to denote the order of authors)
You can get a list of authors for a particular book with this query:
SELECT isbn, title, author_ordinal, first, last
FROM books b
LEFT JOIN books_authors ba ON (b.id = ba.book_id)
LEFT JOIN authors a ON (ba.author_id = a.id)
WHERE isbn = '978whatever'
ORDER BY author_ordinal
You'd also be wise to put a text field called role
in your books_authors table if you want to make your software bibliographically complete. People have various roles in the creation of books like 'author,' 'illustrator,' 'editor,' 'series editor,' 'contributor,' 'preface writer,' and so on. The role
column will let you capture that information.
By the way, most dbms reverse engineering tools will be MUCH happier if you name your id columns consistently throughout. So you should use books.book_id and authors.author_id instead of just books.id and authors.id.
Since a book can have multiple authors, and an author can write more than one book, I'd suggest a many-to many relationship between the Books and Authors tables.
Add another table which links the two, like so:
BookAuthors
| BookID | AuthorID |
BookID is a foreign key to Books.id and AuthorID is a foreign key to Authors.id.
If you want to return all of the authors for a given book, you could do something along the lines of:
SELECT Authors.id, Authors.FirstName, Authors.LastName
FROM Authors INNER JOIN BookAuthors ON Authors.id = BookAuthors.AuthorID
WHERE BookAuthors.BookID = '123'
You need another table called BookAuthor
, you don't need the Authors
column in Books
BookAuthor
------------
BookID
AuthorID
Where the BookID references the PK (BookID) on Books and AuthorID references PK (AuthorID) on Authors
Select b.Title, CONCAT(a.[First Name], a.[Last Name]) As AuthorName
From Books b
JOIN BookAuthor ba ON b.ID = ba.BookID
JOIN Authors a ON ba.AuthorID = a.ID
You have two real possibilities:
So, let's think about that for a second: a book has all its details, and an ID. Each author has many details, and an ID. If you want to associate an author to a book, you add a row to another table, let's say called "Credits".
That way you have two one-to-many relationships (from author to credits, and from book to credits), and can represent what you need without any awkward multi-values.