Using Drizzle ORM to Design and Implement a Complex Database Structure | Common Patterns

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • In this video CJ shows how he used drizzle to implement a complex DB structure to represent a food delivery service called bytedash. He shows how to setup the project, how to create schemas, how to seed the DB with related data and how to query the DB with deeply nested relationships.
    View the DB diagram here: dbdocs.io/w3cj/bytedash?schem...
    View the code here: github.com/w3cj/bytedash
    Read the drizzle docs: orm.drizzle.team/
    Listen to Wes and Scott talk about how they use Drizzle in their apps: syntax.fm/show/721/you-should...
    00:00 Intro
    03:30 Drizzle: A Different Kind of ORM
    04:37 Codebase Intro / Setup
    07:51 Database Structure High Level Overview
    09:20 Drizzle Studio Setup
    12:06 Creating the Schema with Drizzle
    14:10 Drizzle Foreign Key Constraints
    14:45 Drizzle Composite Key Constraints
    15:19 Drizzle Index Constraints
    16:38 Drizzle Migration Setup
    23:18 Seeding the Database with Drizzle
    32:38 Querying the Database with Drizzle
    34:45 Related Queries with Drizzle
    35:39 Creating Table Relations
    37:18 Drizzle Generated SQL Queries
    38:51 Drizzle Join Query
    40:34 Nested Where Queries with Drizzle
    44:00 Final Thoughts on Drizzle
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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    #database #typescript #webdevelopment
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Komentáře • 49

  • @syntaxfm
    @syntaxfm  Před 27 dny +5

    03:30 Drizzle: A Different Kind of ORM
    04:37 Codebase Intro / Setup
    07:51 Database Structure High Level Overview
    09:20 Drizzle Studio Setup
    12:06 Creating the Schema with Drizzle
    14:10 Drizzle Foreign Key Constraints
    14:45 Drizzle Composite Key Constraints
    15:19 Drizzle Index Constraints
    16:38 Drizzle Migration Setup
    23:18 Seeding the Database with Drizzle
    32:38 Querying the Database with Drizzle
    34:45 Related Queries with Drizzle
    35:39 Creating Table Relations
    37:18 Drizzle Generated SQL Queries
    38:51 Drizzle Join Query
    40:34 Nested Where Queries with Drizzle
    44:00 Final Thoughts on Drizzle
    Listen to Wes and Scott talk about how they use Drizzle in their apps: syntax.fm/show/721/you-should-learn-drizzle-the-typescript-sql-orm

  • @Plaswin
    @Plaswin Před 27 dny +13

    Couldn't follow him before in streams because I get distracted by that format. But this edited presentation are absolutely awesome

    • @ofeenee
      @ofeenee Před 27 dny

      I could not agree more!

    • @Anbaraen
      @Anbaraen Před 25 dny +1

      Stream vids felt second-best (this is pretty much always the way with stream vods unless you use Theo or CJs old approach of heavily editing them down). This is perfect.

  • @NicholasMaietta
    @NicholasMaietta Před 27 dny +2

    I'm totally stealing the use of the Zod for getting the env vars checked before doing anything else. This actually would have been nice a few days ago when I couldn't figure out why my DB connections were not working in production. I wasn't getting any errors in logs! This is such a great idea.

  • @paulclarke4099
    @paulclarke4099 Před 26 dny +2

    Your videos are fantastic and always so well explained, thanks so much CJ 💯😃👍

  • @VincentFulco
    @VincentFulco Před 5 dny

    This was an outstanding tutorial. Will watch a few times. Thanks!

  • @ddrweb_
    @ddrweb_ Před 27 dny +1

    I started learning SQL, feels like this is exactly what I will need once fully understand what I am doing. Nice, clean patterns btw. Thanks for this you did an amazing job!
    This new role at syntax really suits you, everything you do has so much value to it, keep being amazing.

  • @Stoney_Eagle
    @Stoney_Eagle Před 27 dny +2

    Nice job! I have watched many videos to make sense of the chaos in de docs and all of them combined missed a lot of information that I needed and is shown here.
    I wish I had this video when I started using it.

  • @talensjr
    @talensjr Před 27 dny +1

    Yet another one of this amazing tutorials!! Keep this going, super helpful from a fullstack developer point of view.
    Thanks! 🙏

  • @chill-hot-stream
    @chill-hot-stream Před 27 dny +1

    cj never stop releasing videos .Your coolify video from last week helped me manage my server effectively.Was using normal terminal but now everything is simple and easy to setup effectively

    • @jbphilippi
      @jbphilippi Před 26 dny

      I agree and hope he will do more coolify videos!

  • @joelkuijper
    @joelkuijper Před 27 dny +2

    This is awesome, thanks for the hard work your putting into these videos CJ!

  • @Michael291288
    @Michael291288 Před 21 dnem

    Amazing! Would love to see the same implementation done with Prisma 🤩

  • @IsakFilms
    @IsakFilms Před 27 dny

    Great video! I've been learning Drizzle/SQL the past months and this was a great refresher. It really helped me understand relationships better

  • @MrAbuYT
    @MrAbuYT Před 27 dny +1

    Awesome! Thank you for this very helpful explanation. Good job CJ.

  • @truthzp
    @truthzp Před 16 dny

    Thanks for the brilliant content! It's exactly what I need now.

  • @kuldar
    @kuldar Před 27 dny

    Absolutely love this new content from CJ. Thank you for making Syntax even better!

  • @prashlovessamosa
    @prashlovessamosa Před 27 dny +1

    Great explanation CJ thanks
    Please keep uploading good stuff.

  • @vitalikda
    @vitalikda Před 27 dny +1

    Omg! It's pure gold! Thank you

  • @bashiryousufy1
    @bashiryousufy1 Před 12 dny

    CJ is the best, been watching him on Coding Garden

  • @zhanezar
    @zhanezar Před 26 dny

    another great video thanks i really liked the idea of using Zod for Environment variables instead of adding another libray , thanks CJ

  • @cpakken
    @cpakken Před 15 dny +1

    What is the vscode theme you're using?

  • @adamcollier1907
    @adamcollier1907 Před 24 dny +1

    Great video as always CJ! I know you touched on migrations but I’d love to know how to handle migrations for prod, e.g you already have an app running and need to run a migration without breaking anything. Also worth mentioning Drizzles proxy driver, was great for my move away from Planetscale and still allowed me to use Vercel edge functions

  • @brennenrocks
    @brennenrocks Před 16 dny

    What are your thoughts on using UUIDs for primary keys instead of `serial` in Postgres?

  • @ayushgogna9732
    @ayushgogna9732 Před 4 dny

    18:07 actually in the version @0.21.0 there is a way to handle migrations in drizzle without a migration file with "drizzle-kit migrate"
    No more push:pg, generate:mysql. Just use push, generate and specify dialect in config once!

  • @petermckeever2360
    @petermckeever2360 Před 27 dny

    Well this was incredibly helpful

  • @pavank4466
    @pavank4466 Před 26 dny

    Great video, Thank You 👏

  • @joaquimley
    @joaquimley Před 7 dny

    Cj you are amazing ☘️

  • @premdasv8
    @premdasv8 Před 5 dny

    What's the font you are using in your vscode?

  • @paoloricciuti
    @paoloricciuti Před 19 dny

    I think i actually did the same error when i used Drizzle with sqlite but from what I've researched closing the db connection is not handled by drizzle so with PG you can use the Pool to use a connection pool but you have to find ways to do the same with other drivers otherwise you will either clog up or all your connections will pile up. This is obviously less of a problem with serverless but i think is worth mentioning.

  • @ArionKosturi
    @ArionKosturi Před 27 dny

    Thank you CJ

  • @russpalermo
    @russpalermo Před 24 dny

    cool CJ. On seeding the db have you thought about or tried running the seeding as a single transaction in postgres? I think I did this in a prior project using knex where I set the table fk contraints to 'deferred' the ran a promise.all on the seed files where the commit did not happen until all data was stuffed in the tables.

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 24 dny

      Yes this should be easy enough with drizzle, just wrap the insert code into a db.transaction call: orm.drizzle.team/docs/transactions

  • @w3mw
    @w3mw Před 26 dny

    Great video as always CJ! I’m building a project right now with nest js and prisma as backend and I thinking of next js with drizzle in front end is that possible tough or should I use the same ORM in both ways? Never tried drizzle before so I’m not sure if it works good with nest js but I guess it does 😄 what do you recommend?

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 25 dny

      Drizzle is just typescript, so it will work just fine with nest js.
      It is possible to use 2 different DB libraries to connect to the DB, but if you can consolidate to a single one, that would be ideal. If you are working in a mono repo, you could also have a library specifically for the db / queries and share this between projects.
      -CJ

  • @officialdanieldsouza
    @officialdanieldsouza Před 25 dny

    Hey awsome video, this video really clarified organization of my files in drizzle. I was wondering what is the best field type to use for the primary key, I know in your example you have used serial but I was just wondering in terms of security, performance, running out of integers. Would love to hear your thoughts on this dude!

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 25 dny

      There's always a trade off in performance / usability.
      string ids (guids) are good for large distributed systems where you might be inserting many many rows all at once across several nodes. guids can also be generated outside of the DB, so you could generate them before insert.
      auto incrementing integer keys might be vulnerable to enumeration attacks if your application code does not protect against it. e.g. someone might try requesting /users/1, /users/2, /users/3 etc. but this is only vulnerable if you have not locked down the API.
      postgres serial / int maxes out at 2,147,483,647 but if you are worried about running out, you could use bigint / bigserial which maxes out at 9,223,372,036,854,775,807
      I have a lot of apps still in production that used int / serial keys, but those apps only have a few thousand users. Worrying about running out of primary keys / insertion performance is likely only needed if your going to be working on things at a much bigger scale.
      -CJ

  • @yiannis_p
    @yiannis_p Před 27 dny

    Amazing video as usual!
    One thing I would also add here is that drizzle offers a db:push functionality so you don’t have to deal with any migrations!
    Also the foreign keys are optional, as you can still use their orm style query builder without foreign keys just using the relationships you defined in the schema! Works really well in an environment like planetscale which only has online ddl and has no foreign keys!

  • @dummy_code
    @dummy_code Před 24 dny

    Does it support raw sql queries?

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 24 dny

      Yes and it parameterizes them by default: orm.drizzle.team/docs/goodies#raw-sql-queries-execution
      If you don't want parameterization you can use sql.raw

  • @sasquatch_devs
    @sasquatch_devs Před 25 dny

    Would love your thoughts on Lucide ORM by the creators of AdonisJS!

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 24 dny

      I'm not sure how I feel about the lack of type safety 🤔
      The author talks about it here: github.com/thetutlage/meta/discussions/8
      I think I would rather have a single source of truth with drizzle for the table schema / inferred insert / select types, inferred validators etc. than worry about a query not having a typescript error when it should. I haven't run into the type issues during querying the author brings up in that post.
      With lucid you need to define your models separately from creating the tables. Migrating needs to be done manually for every column / change and then you need to update the model to match. This is very similar to my experience with sequelize.
      With drizzle, you update the schema type and then the migrations are auto generated from the schema change and the inferred types continue to flow through.
      Seems like a trade of better type safety during querying vs better type safety / single source of truth from model definitions. In my experience with other libraries, keeping the models in the code base up to date with the table schema is one of the biggest pain points, not querying.
      -CJ

  • @polioann
    @polioann Před 25 dny

    How about recursive schemas? (like the comment section)

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 25 dny

      Self referencing keys is possible and set up in the same way: orm.drizzle.team/docs/rqb#one-to-one

    • @polioann
      @polioann Před 25 dny

      @@syntaxfm Nice! Thx

  • @user-tb4ig7qh9b
    @user-tb4ig7qh9b Před 25 dny

    For me drizzle sucks and prisma sucks sorry for that i prefer kysley

    • @syntaxfm
      @syntaxfm  Před 25 dny +1

      What do you like more about Kysley? Also what makes you say Drizzle and Prisma sucks, in my experience they are both great options

    • @user-tb4ig7qh9b
      @user-tb4ig7qh9b Před 25 dny

      @@syntaxfm i worked with prisma and drizzle before but for very easy jobs but sometimes you pull data from alot of table and do aggregation and window function and lots of stuff okay sometimes we make a view on database but when i write new feature i need a tool to provide me most of things and drizzle already lack alot of sql features and prisma have the same problems i work on my job with ecto it is lib written in elixir and man working with so much easier.
      I used alot of orm like prisma awesome until you start making joins and take data from alot of tables and make aggregation you just lost the way for prisma.
      Drizzle just low level implementation of sql if we have versions for sql i will give drizzle like 0.1
      I sometimes even work with laravel and for meduim things it is okay but after that you will write sql in your hand.
      so i think the only true orm i used until ecto and linq give you all the power it make the write mapping for objects and alot of stuff.
      Why kysley i was have a project it is scrapper and i need to feed this data to db so i tried prisma and drizzle does not fit but when i tried kysley and make inspect db i just get the completion type safety and do not need to deal with writing my geolocation types i think that a joke you have orm that does not support goelocation 😦