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How are tags stored in the database and how are they used to search the question if there are multiple tags associated with that question?

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2 Answers 2

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Tags are stored both de-normalized and normalized. At least that is what I learned from the SEDE datamodel and some feedback from SE developers.

The posts table (with id as its primarykey) has a tags column that for example holds <jquery><javascript><css>.

The tags table holds all tags in a id (primary key) and tagname where tagname holds a single tag like haskell or c++.

The relation between a post and its tags is stored in the relation table called posttags with two foreignkey columns, postid and tagid. The former is for the relation to the posts table, the latter to the tags table.

Searching in SEDE can be done rather naively and with the cost of a full table scan:

select top 100 id as [Post Link] 
from posts
where tags like '%<haskell>%'
order by creationdate desc

or with proper inner joins

select top 100 p.id as [Post Link] 
from posts p
inner join posttags pt on pt.postid = p.id
inner join tags t on t.id = pt.tagid
where tagname ='haskell'
order by p.creationdate desc

See the documentation of the data model on MSE or the ERD for more details.

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    This is of course assuming that the live schema pretty closely resembles the SEDE schema. Not saying it doesn't of course, but I don't recall seeing anything confirming or denying it.
    – DavidG
    Apr 7, 2016 at 21:44
  • where tagname typically contains haskell. - are you suggesting that the haskell tag is duplicated in the tags table or that it is the most popular tag? :D
    – Keith Hall
    Apr 8, 2016 at 6:41
  • @KeithHall isn't Haskell the next jQuery?
    – rene
    Apr 8, 2016 at 9:06
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You can use this syntax in the search field appearing at the top right side:

[c++]

or

[javascript][css]
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    The question reads as asking about how tag searching works on the back end, not how to search by tags. "How are tags are stored in the database" is the first line part of the question, after all.
    – Kendra
    Apr 7, 2016 at 18:25

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