• Deebster@programming.dev
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    25 days ago

    In time-based pagination, the suggested fix to lots of data in a selected timespan is:

    simply adding a limit to the amount of records returned (potentially via a query parameter) transparently solves it.

    This means clients can’t see all the results, unless you add a way to view other pages of data, which is just pagination again. Or is the intended design that clients view either the first x results (the default) or view all results?

    The problem with articles like OPs and others is that they don’t allow custom sorting, which is often a requirement, e.g. interfaces that present the data in a table, where column headers can be clicked to sort.

    • Jade@programming.devOP
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      24 days ago

      Regarding your first paragraph, this results limit is per page. To get the next page, you take your timestamp of the last item and use it in from_time, or whatever you’ve called it. It’s still a pagination technique.

      Regarding custom sorting, some of the techniques in the article can do this, some of them can’t. Obviously timestamp based pagination can’t, however the ID-based pagination that I mentioned can.

  • solrize@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    Fairly lame article but yeah this is something lemmy used to get wrong. I haven’t paid attention to whether it still does.

    • Jade@programming.devOP
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      25 days ago

      They fixed this in version 0.19 pr #3872 (note that the cursor here is a way of hiding a post ID to continue from, as far as I can see).

      Also, lame article? 😖

      • Rimu@piefed.social
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        25 days ago

        Not lame, I appreciated it and as a result will be implementing ID-based pagination, sometime.

      • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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        25 days ago

        Also, lame article? 😖

        It’s pretty short, it could be improved with benchmarks or at least some examples of how that would be implemented efficiently. Maybe a bit of pros and cons, cursor pagination for example doesn’t handle “go directly to page 200” very well. I’ve also seen some interesting hacks to make offset pagination surprisingly fast with a clever subquery.

        I wouldn’t call it lame though.

        • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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          24 days ago

          I mean, for what it’s worth, you calling it “pretty short” is what made me go read the article, because quite frankly, my attention span isn’t long enough to read through an average-length article for a topic like this.

      • solrize@lemmy.world
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        24 days ago

        Ah, thanks for linking that PR. The point made in the article is a good and helpful one, as can be seen by the way so many sites get it wrong, including Lemmy in the past. It’s just that it is pretty thin to make a whole article around. It would be a good thing to bring up in an optimization guide that covers more topics.

        I would be interested to know if there is substantial cost to keeping cursors open for long periods, while the db is being updated. I think given those labels, it may be preferable to do a new select each time the user requests the next page. But I haven’t benchmarked that.

        If you look at how Wikipedia pages through article histories, the labels are timestamps with 1 second resolution.

        Here is another article about the same topic, part of the author’s book on SQL performance:

        https://use-the-index-luke.com/sql/partial-results/fetch-next-page

  • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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    24 days ago

    Pretty useful article! I’m pretty sure I’ve seen data shifting happen a few times on Jerboa.

    I wonder if uuid7 based pagination solves these issues. Precise enough that you don’t overlap/over fetch data with time based pagination, while still being essentially time based so you have a consistent offset. Definitely important to limit the size if requests, though.

    • Deebster@programming.dev
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      24 days ago

      Probably not; I’d expect the places where you need something like UUIDv7 (large, eventually-consistent systems) to not be entirely suitable because you can have records added out of sequence. You’d have to add a received-at field - but in that case you may as well just use a standard incrementing ID as your primary key.

    • Jade@programming.devOP
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      24 days ago

      This whole article was sprung from a discussion of exactly that case, because users often simply don’t delete notifications. It’s very common for users to have years of undismissed notifications stacked up under the notification bell, and it’s not a good experience to load them all at once.