many to many

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Gavin 2023-05-09 23:30:21 +02:00 committed by Christian Beikov
parent 51068f7931
commit 1c8adcde96
1 changed files with 56 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -764,6 +764,8 @@ In particular, the `List` may not contain duplicate elements, and its order will
Collection<Book> books; Collection<Book> books;
---- ----
(We'll see how to map a collection with a persistent order later.)
[NOTE] [NOTE]
.`Set`, `List`, or `Collection`? .`Set`, `List`, or `Collection`?
==== ====
@ -785,6 +787,8 @@ In hindsight, we could have done more to make clear that this was always a viabl
The simplest sort of one to one association is almost exactly line a `@ManyToOne` association, except that it maps to a foreign key column with a `UNIQUE` constraint. The simplest sort of one to one association is almost exactly line a `@ManyToOne` association, except that it maps to a foreign key column with a `UNIQUE` constraint.
A one to one association must be annotated `@OneToOne`:
[source,java] [source,java]
---- ----
@Entity @Entity
@ -841,7 +845,6 @@ This is not the only sort of one to one association.
=== One to one (second way) === One to one (second way)
An arguably more elegant way to represent such a relationship is to share a primary key between the two tables. An arguably more elegant way to represent such a relationship is to share a primary key between the two tables.
That is, the foreign key would be the primary key.
To use this approach, the `Author` class must be annotated like this: To use this approach, the `Author` class must be annotated like this:
@ -867,6 +870,55 @@ That is, that the foreign key column referring to the `Author` table is also the
The `Person` class does not change. The `Person` class does not change.
If the association is bidirectional, we annotate the unowned side `@OneToOne(mappedBy = "person")` just as before. If the association is bidirectional, we annotate the unowned side `@OneToOne(mappedBy = "person")` just as before.
[[many-to-many]]
=== Many to many
A unidirectional many to many association is represented as a collection-valued attribute.
It maps to a separate _association table_ in the database.
A many to many association must be annotated `@ManyToMany`:
[source,java]
----
class Book {
@Id @GeneratedValue
Long id;
@ManyToMany
Set<Author> authors;
...
}
----
If the association is bidirectional, we add a very similar-looking attribute to `Book`, but this time we must specify `mappedBy` to indicate that this is unowned side of the association:
[source,java]
----
class Book {
@Id @GeneratedValue
Long id;
@ManyToMany(mappedBy="authors")
Set<Author> authors;
...
}
----
We've again used ``Set``s to represent the association.
As before, we have the option to `Collection` or `List`, but in this case it _does_ make a difference to the semantics of the association.
[NOTE]
.Sets and bags
====
A many to many association represented as a `Collection` or `List` may contain duplicate elements.
However, as before, the order of the elements is not persistent.
That is, the collection is a _bag_, not a set.
====
[[element-collections]]
=== `@ElementCollection`
[[equals-and-hash]] [[equals-and-hash]]
=== `equals()` and `hashCode()` === `equals()` and `hashCode()`