this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2024
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Learn Programming
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This is the kind of stuff that UUID’s are good for. When you want to generate non conflicting unique id’s. Even across systems and over time.
I personally feel UUIDs are overused unless you happen to be running truly distributed systems that are all independently generating IDs.
In this case where the ID is also going to be in the URL, you've just added 32 characters to the URL that don't need to be there. Since OP is apparently concerned with the look and feel of the URLs, I thought that UUIDs wouldn't be the best option.