My requirement
A table needs to maintain a status column.
This column represents one of 5 states.
initial desi
Changing the set of values in an ENUM requires an ALTER TABLE
which might cause a table restructure -- an incredibly expensive operation (the table restructure doesn't happen if you simply add one new value to the end of the ENUM definition, but if you delete one, or change the order, it does a table restructure). Whereas Changing the set of values in a lookup table is as simple as INSERT or DELETE.
There's no way to associate other attributes with the values in an ENUM, like which ones are retired, and which ones are eligible to be put in a drop-down list in your user interface. However, a lookup table can include additional columns for such attributes.
It's very difficult to query an ENUM to get a list of distinct values, basically requiring you to query the data type definition from INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, and parsing the list out of the BLOB returned. You could try SELECT DISTINCT status
from your table, but that only gets status values currently in use, which might not be all values in the ENUM. However, if you keep values in a lookup table, it's easy to query, sort, etc.
I'm not a big fan of ENUM, as you can tell. :-)
The same applies to CHECK constraints that simply compare a column to a fixed set of values. Though MySQL doesn't support CHECK constraints anyway.
Update: MySQL 8.0.16 now implements CHECK constraints.
Enums in MySQL are bad for the already explained reasons.
I can add the following fact: Enum does not ensure any kind of validation on the server side. If you insert a row with a value which does not exist in the enum definition, you'll get a nice <empty>
or NULL
value in the DB, depending on NULL-ability of the enum field declaration.
My point about tinyints:
Here is article about speed comparison of enum. Maybe it gives some hints. IMHO it should be limited to a use in fixed list of strings ("Yes/No", "Child/Adult") that with 99% probability doesn't change in the future.
A table would be easier to internationalize. But so would a class outside the database entirely. This kind of check can be hard to debug when it's not in the business logic, and would typically not be the responsibility of database people.
As an optimization, it's probably very premature; but OP mainly proposes it as a convenience feature anyway.
See also http://komlenic.com/244/8-reasons-why-mysqls-enum-data-type-is-evil/
If you have lots of data in your DB ( more data then you have RAM ) and you ENUM values are NEVER going to change, I would go with ENUM, rather than the join. It should be faster.
Think about it, in the join case, you need an index on your foreign key and index on your primary key in the other table. As Riho said, see the benchmarks.