© The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved APPENDIX C DESIGNING DATABASES APPENDIX C DESIGNING DATABASES.

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© The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved APPENDIX C DESIGNING DATABASES APPENDIX C DESIGNING DATABASES

2 INTRODUCTION  The core chapters introduced: Database - maintains information about various types of objects (inventory), events (transactions), people (employees), and places (warehouses) Database management system (DBMS) – creates, reads, updates, and deletes data in a database while controlling access and security Relational database model - a type of database that stores its information in the form of logically-related two-dimensional tables

3 ENTITIES AND DATA RELATIONSHIPS  Data model – The logical data structures that detail the relationships among data elements using graphics or pictures  The underlying relationships in a database environment are: Independent of the data model Independent of the DBMS that is being used  Entity-relationship diagram (ERD) - A technique for documenting the relationships between entities in a database environment

4 Entities And Their Attributes  Entity - Also called a table, stores information about a person, place, thing, transaction, or event A customer is an entity, as is a merchandise item  Attribute – Data elements associated with an entity A CUSTOMER entity can be described by a Customer Number, First Name, Last Name, Street, City, State, Zip Code, Phone Number

5 Entities And Their Attributes

6 Attributes  There are several types of attributes including: Simple versus composite Single-valued versus multi-valued Stored versus derived Null-valued

7 Simple versus Composite  Composite attributes can be divided into smaller subparts, which represent more basic attributes that have their own meanings  Example: Address  Address can be broken down into a number of subparts, such as Street, City, State, Zip Code  Street may be further broken down by Number, Street Name, and Apartment/Unit Number  Attributes that are not divisible into subparts are called simple attributes

8 Simple versus Composite

9 Single-Valued versus Multi-Valued  Single-valued attribute means having only a single value of each attribute of an entity at any given time  Example: A CUSTOMER entity allows only one Telephone Number for each CUSTOMER If a CUSTOMER has more than one Phone Number and wants them all included in the database the CUSTOMER entity cannot handle them

10  Multi-valued attribute means having the potential to contain more than one value for an attribute at any given time  An entity in a relational database cannot have multi-valued attributes, those attributes must be handled by creating another entity to hold them  Relational databases do not allow multi-valued attributes because they can cause problems: Confuses the meaning of data in the database Significantly slow down searching Place unnecessary restrictions on the amount of data that can be stored Single-Valued versus Multi- Valued

11 Single-Valued versus Multi- Valued

12 Stored versus Derived  If an attribute can be calculated using the value of another attribute, it is called a derived attribute  The attribute that is used to derive the attribute is called a stored attribute  Derived attributes are not stored in the file, but can be derived when needed from the stored attributes  Example: A person’s age - if the database has a stored attribute such as the person’s Date of Birth, you can create a derived attribute called Age from taking the Current Date and subtracting the Date of Birth to get the age

13 Null-Valued  Null-valued attribute – Assigned to an attribute when no other value applies or when a value is unknown  Example: A person who does not have a mobile phone would have null stored at the value for the Mobile Phone Number attribute

14 DOCUMENTING ENTITY- RELATIONSHIP DIAGRAMS  The two most commonly used styles of ERD notation are: 1.Chen 2.Information Engineering  The Chen model uses rectangles to represent entities Each entity's name appears in the rectangle and is expressed in the singular, as in CUSTOMER Attributes are expressed in ovals

15 Basic Data Relationships

16 Basic Data Relationships  The relationships that are stored in a database are between instances of entities

17  Once the basic entities and attributes have been defined, the next task is to identify the relationships among entities  There are three basic types of relationships: 1.One-to-one 2.One-to-many 3.Many-to-many Basic Data Relationships

18 One-to-One  One-to-one (1:1) – A relationship between two entities in which an instance of entity A can be related to only one instance of entity B and entity B can be related to only one instance of entity A

19 One-to-Many  One-to-many (1:M) – A relationship between two entities, in which an instance of entity A, can be related to zero, one, or more instances of entity B and entity B can be related to only one instance of entity A

20 Many-to-Many  Many-to-many (M:N) – A relationship between two entities in which an instance of entity A can be related to zero, one, or more instances of entity B and entity B can be related to zero, one, or more instances of entity A

21 Documenting Relationships – The Chen Method  The Chen method uses diamonds for relationships and lines with arrows to show the type of relationship between entities

22  There is no obvious way to indicate weak entities and mandatory relationships An ORDER should not exist in the database without a CUSTOMER ORDER is a weak entity and its relationship with a CUSTOMER is mandatory Some database designers have added a new symbol to the Chen method for a weak entity, a double- bordered rectangle Documenting Relationships – The Chen Method

23 DEALING WITH MANY-TO- MANY RELATIONSHIPS  There are problems with many-to-many relationships 1.The relational data model cannot handle many-to-many relationships directly –It is limited to one-to-one and one-to-many relationships –Many-to-many relationships need to be replaced with a collection of one-to-many relationships 2.Relationships cannot have attributes –An entity must represent the relationship

24 Composite Entities  Composite entities - Entities that exist to represent the relationship between two other entities  Example: There is a many-to-many relationship between an ITEM and an ORDER  An ORDER can contain many ITEM(s) and over time, the same ITEM can appear on many ORDER(s)

25 Composite Entities

26 Composite Entities

27 RELATIONSHIP CONNECTIVITY AND CARDINALITY  Cardinality - expresses the specific number of entity occurrences associated with one occurrence of the related entity  In the Chen model, the cardinality is indicated by placing numbers beside the entities in the format of (x, y) The first number is the minimum value and the second number is the maximum value

28 Relational Data Model and the Database  Once the ERD is completed, it can be translated from a conceptual logical schema into the formal data model required by the DBMS  Most database installations are based on the relational data model  The relational data model is the result of the work of one person, Edgar (E. F.) Codd

29 FROM ENTITIES TO TABLES  The word “table” is used synonymously with “entity”  The definition specifies what will be contained in each column of the table, but does not include data

30 FROM ENTITIES TO TABLES  When rows of data are included, an instance of a relation is created

31 FROM ENTITIES TO TABLES  When the same column name appears in more than one table and tables that contain that column are used in the same data manipulation operation The name of the column must be qualified by preceding it with the name of the table and a period  Example: CUSTOMER.Customer Number, First Name, Last Name, Phone Number

32 FROM ENTITIES TO TABLES  A row in a relation has the following properties: Only one value at the intersection of a column and row - a relation does not allow multi- valued attributes Uniqueness - there are no duplicate rows in a relation Primary key - A field (or group of fields) that uniquely identifies a given entity in a table

33 FROM ENTITIES TO TABLES  A unique primary key makes it possible to uniquely identify every row in a table  The primary key is important to define to be able to retrieve every single piece of data put into a database  There are only three pieces of information to retrieve for any specific bit of data: 1.The name of the table 2.The name of the column 3.The primary key of the row

34  The proper notation to use when documenting the name of the table, the column name, and primary key: CUSTOMER(Customer Number, First Name, Last Name, Phone Number)  Two qualities of all primary keys: 1.A primary key should contain some value that is highly unlikely ever to be null 2.A primary key should never change FROM ENTITIES TO TABLES

35 LOGICALLY RELATING TABLES  The use of identifiers represent relationships between entities

36  When a table contains a column that is the same as the primary key of a table, the column is called a foreign key  Foreign key - A primary key of one table that appears as an attribute in another file and acts to provide a logical relationship between the two files  Example: CUSTOMER(Customer Number, First Name, Last Name, Phone Number) ORDER(Order Number, Customer Number, Order Date) LOGICALLY RELATING TABLES

37 LOGICALLY RELATING TABLES  Foreign keys do not necessarily need to reference a primary key in a different table They need only reference a primary key  Example: EMPLOYEE(Employee Number, First Name, Last Name, Department, Manager Number)