Scheduling Employees - what data structure to use?

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别那么骄傲
别那么骄傲 2021-02-02 00:12

Question

I\'m trying to write a simple employee Scheduling software for about 10-20 people in my software development company. After some consideration I settled on wr

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  • 2021-02-02 00:41

    I would go with three-table Kimball star (Date, Employee, Schedule), because sooner or later you will be asked to create (demanding) reports out of this. Who worked most nights? Who worked most weekends? Who never works weekends? Why am I always scheduled Friday afternoon? On which day of a week are certain employees most likely not to show up? Etc, etc...

    Tables would be:

    TABLE dimDate (
        KeyDate
      , FullDate
      , DayOfWeek
      , DayNumberInWeek
      , IsHoliday
      ,... more here
    )
    

    You can pre-fill dimDate table for 10 years, or so -- may need to tweak the "IsHoliday" column from time to time.

    Employee table also changes (relatively) rarely.

    TABLE dimEmployee (
        KeyEmployee
      , FirstName
      , LastName
      , Age
      , ... more here
    )
    

    Schedule table is where you would fill-in the work schedule, I have also suggested "HoursOfWork" for each shift, this way it is easy to aggregate hours in reports, like: "How many hours did John Doe work last year on holidays?"

    TABLE
    factSchedule (
        KeySchedule  -- surrogate PK
      , KeyDate      -- FK to dimDate table
      , KeyEmployee  -- FK to dimEmployee table
      , Shift        -- shift number (degenerate dimension)
      , HoursOfWork  -- number of work hours in that shift
    )
    

    Instead of having the surrogate KeySchedule, you could also combine KeyDate, KeyEmployee and Shift into a composite primary key to make sure you can not schedule same person on the same shift the same day. Check this on the application layer if the surrogate key is used. When querying, join tables like:

    SELECT SUM(s.HoursOfWork)
     FROM factSchedule AS s
     JOIN dimDate      AS d ON s.KeyDate = d.KeyDate
     JOIN dimEmployee  AS e ON s.KeyEmployee = e.KeyEmployee
    WHERE e.FirstName='John'
      AND e.LastName='Doe'
      AND d.Year = 2009
      AND d.IsHoliday ='Yes';
    

    If using MySQL it is OK to use MyISAM for storage engine and implement your foreign keys (FK) as "logical only" -- use the application layer to take care of referential integrity.

    Hope this helps.


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  • 2021-02-02 00:42

    A quick answer first:

    • EmployeeID
    • Date
    • ShiftType

    That said, the best database design largely depends on what you're going to do with the data. If all you need to do is store the records and display them in a table similar to you example, your approach (while not elegant) would work.

    However, if you're going to retrieve the data or run reports, you're going to want something a little more structured than a string where each character represents the type of shift assignment.

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  • 2021-02-02 00:48

    I'd suggest a more noramlized database, e.g. a table for persons and one which is the product of shift information for a perdon and a date.

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