Chasm traps

A chasm trap occurs when two many-to-one joins converge on a single table.

In a complex schema, you may have a fact table with no relationship to another fact table, except that each contains a foreign key to a shared dimension table. This is known as a chasm trap, and ThoughtSpot can handle it!

Understand how chasm traps occur

A fact table, just as it sounds, stores facts about your business. If you are selling apples, the sales fact table has facts about these apples.

SaleID AppleTypeID StoreID Units Sold

4

55

2

12

8

34

33

3

10

09

09

1

Dimension tables describe the attributes that are interesting to analyze. For example, the apple table might look like this.

AppleTypeID Color Name Use

55

Red

Red Delicious

Snack

34

Green

Granny Smith

Cooking

09

Yellow

Golden

Snack

As you can imagine, in a business you might have several fact tables that access dimension tables. So, an apple business may record waste as well as sales.

TimeID AppleTypeID StoreID Units Wasted

4

55

2

2

8

34

33

43

10

09

09

11

Both the sales and waste tables are facts that reference the apple dimension table.

A chasm trap in a data schema can introduce problems of over counting if you join the two fact tables through their shared dimension table. This diagram shows a typical complex schema with several tables that are related over a chasm trap:

chasm trap complex

Examples of use cases where a chasm trap could occur when attribution analysis compare campaign data with purchase data, where all they have in common is that both contain a customer identifier that is a foreign key to a customer dimension table. Chasm traps also occur, for example, in cost of sales analysis when wholesale orders data is only related to the retail sales data through a shared products dimension table.

In many databases, joining tables across a chasm trap creates a Cartesian product or cross join. That is each row from the first fact table is joined to each row from the second table. A Cartesian product causes over counting when computing counts and aggregates. ThoughtSpot protects you from this kind of over counting.

There are still just a few things to look out for when using a schema that contains chasm traps:

  • The tables should be joined to the dimension table by an equi-join (a primary key/foreign key relationship). They cannot be joined using a range of values.

  • Review the column setting called Attribution Dimension. You may need to change this setting if some of the columns in the shared dimension table should not be used for attribution when combining fact tables.

  • Tables that will be joined across a chasm trap do not have to be co-sharded. They will be joined appropriately automatically in the most efficient way.

Chasm trap limitations

Join information in What am I Looking At? does not appear for searches on a worksheet containing a chasm trap or on base tables that are related over a chasm trap.