happyaslarry
New member
- Local time
- Today, 00:48
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20
Hello
I have written a database which I use to do quotations for my plumbing business. The materials I use are either Stock items which we keep on the shelf (copper pipe etc), Non-stock items which we hold prices and information on but are too expensive to hold in stock (boilers etc) and Special items which are things like shower enclosures which we will specify for a job and possibly never use the same one again.
I currently have two materials tables - one for Stock and Non-stock items (differentiated between with a Stocked Y/N field) and one for Special materials.
It has made writing complicated reports more difficult by having two tables and in the next build of the db I am considering merging the data. I know this is good practise but is there any reason not to merge the tables - performance etc... or anything else I should be aware of?
I have written a database which I use to do quotations for my plumbing business. The materials I use are either Stock items which we keep on the shelf (copper pipe etc), Non-stock items which we hold prices and information on but are too expensive to hold in stock (boilers etc) and Special items which are things like shower enclosures which we will specify for a job and possibly never use the same one again.
I currently have two materials tables - one for Stock and Non-stock items (differentiated between with a Stocked Y/N field) and one for Special materials.
It has made writing complicated reports more difficult by having two tables and in the next build of the db I am considering merging the data. I know this is good practise but is there any reason not to merge the tables - performance etc... or anything else I should be aware of?