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Advanced Information Modeling and Database Systems
Introduction to Database
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Data, Information, Knowledge, and Wisdom
Data: facts concerning people, objects, events or other entities Structured: numbers, text, dates Unstructured: images, video, documents Information: data that are processed to be useful; answers "who", "what", "where", and "when" questions Knowledge: the appropriate collection of information, such that it's intent is to be useful; answers "how" questions Understanding: appreciation of “why” Wisdom: evaluated understanding
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File Systems Traditionally composed of collection of file folders kept in file cabinet Organization within folders was based on data’s expected use (ideally logically related) System was adequate for small amounts of data with few reporting requirements Finding and using data in growing collections of file folders became time consuming and cumbersome
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File Systems (cont.)
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File Systems (cont.) Advantages of File Systems
No resource overhead No cost overhead Speed to access data Disadvantages of File Systems Data redundancy and inconsistency Difficulty in access data and process data Lack of standardizations Hard to maintenance and update data Security problems, etc….…
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Database System and Database Management System (DBMS)
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Database System (cont.)
Shared collection of logically related data (and a description of this data), designed to meet the information needs of an organization. System catalog (metadata, data dictionary) provides description of data to enable program–data independence. Logically related data comprises entities, attributes, and relationships of an organization’s information.
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Database Management System (DBMS)
A software system that enables users to define, create, maintain, and control access to the database. (Database) application program: a computer program that interacts with database by issuing an appropriate request (SQL statement) to the DBMS.
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Components of DBMS Environment
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Advantages of DBMSs Control of data redundancy Data consistency
More information from the same amount of data Sharing of data Improved data integrity Improved security Enforcement of standards Economy of scale Multiple applications on 1 set of data
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Advantages of DBMSs Balance conflicting requirements
DBA makes decision about the design and operational use of database in order to achieve the optimal performance Improved data accessibility and responsiveness Increased productivity Improved maintenance through data independence Increased concurrency Improved backup and recovery service
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Disadvantages of DBMSs
Complexity Size Cost of DBMS Additional hardware costs Cost of conversion Performance DBMS is written to be more general (as opposed to being specific to a certain type of application), so it may not run as fast as the file-based systems. Higher impact of a failure – single point of failure
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ANSI-SPARC Three-Level Architecture
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Database Architecture (cont.)
External Level Users’ view of the database. Describes that part of database that is relevant to a particular user. Conceptual Level Community view of the database. Describes what data is stored in database and relationships among the data. Internal Level Physical representation of the database on the computer. Describes how the data is stored in the database.
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Differences between Three Levels of ANSI-SPARC Architecture
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Benefit of 3-level Architecture: Data Independence
Logical Data Independence Capacity to change conceptual schema without having to change external schema or application programs Physical Data Independence Capacity to change the internal schema without having to change the conceptual (or external) schemas
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Data Independence and the ANSI-SPARC Three-Level Architecture
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Data Model Integrated collection of concepts for describing data, relationships between data, and constraints on the data in an organization. Data Model comprises: A structural part; which database can be constructed A manipulative part; types of allowed operation A set of integrity rules; ensuring accuracy of data
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Data Model (Cont.) Purpose Categories of data models include:
To represent data in an understandable way. Categories of data models include: Physical Record-based Object-based
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Data Model Physical Data Models Record-Based Data Models
Hierarchical Data Model Network Data Model Relational Data Model Object-Based Data Models Entity-Relationship Data Model Object-Oriented Data Model etc.
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Hierarchical Data Model
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Network Data Model
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Relational Data Model
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Entity Relationship Data Model
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Object Oriented Data Model
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Evolution of Data Models
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ER Diagram of Branch User Views of DreamHome
ER Data Modeling ER Diagram of Branch User Views of DreamHome © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Concepts of the ER Model
Entity types Relationship types Attributes © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Entity Type Entity type Entity occurrence
Group of objects with same properties, identified by enterprise as having an independent existence. Entity occurrence Uniquely identifiable object of an entity type. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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ER diagram of Staff and Branch Entity Types
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Relationship Types Relationship type Relationship occurrence
Set of meaningful associations among entity types. Relationship occurrence Uniquely identifiable association, which includes one occurrence from each participating entity type. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic net of “Has” Relationship Type
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ER diagram of Branch “Has” Staff Relationship
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Relationship Types Degree of a Relationship Relationship of degree:
Number of participating entities in relationship. Relationship of degree: Two is binary Three is ternary Four is quaternary. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Binary Relationship called “POwns”
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Ternary Relationship called “Registers”
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Quaternary Relationship called “Arranges”
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Relationship Types Recursive Relationship
Relationship type where same entity type participates more than once in different roles. Relationships may be given role names to indicate purpose that each participating entity type plays in a relationship. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Recursive Relationship called “Supervises” with Role Names
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Entities Associated through Two Distinct Relationships with Role Names
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Attributes Attribute Attribute Domain Simple Attribute
Property of an entity or a relationship type. Attribute Domain Set of allowable values for one or more attributes. Simple Attribute Attribute composed of a single component with an independent existence. Composite Attribute Attribute composed of multiple components, each with an independent existence. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Attributes Single-valued Attribute Multi-valued Attribute
Attribute that holds a single value for each occurrence of an entity type. Multi-valued Attribute Attribute that holds multiple values for each occurrence of an entity type. Derived Attribute Attribute that represents a value that is derivable from value of a related attribute, or set of attributes, not necessarily in the same entity type. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Keys Candidate Key Primary Key Composite Key
Minimal set of attributes that uniquely identifies each occurrence of an entity type. Primary Key Candidate key selected to uniquely identify each occurrence of an entity type. Composite Key A candidate key that consists of two or more attributes. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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ER Diagram of Staff and Branch Entities and Their Attributes
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Entity Type Strong Entity Type Weak Entity Type
Entity type that is not existence-dependent on some other entity type. Weak Entity Type Entity type that is existence-dependent on some other entity type. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Relationship called “Advertises” with Attributes
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Structural Constraints
Main type of constraint on relationships is called multiplicity. Multiplicity - number (or range) of possible occurrences of an entity type that may relate to a single occurrence of an associated entity type through a particular relationship. Represents policies (called business rules) established by user or company. The most common degree for relationships is binary. Binary relationships are generally referred to as being: one-to-one (1:1) one-to-many (1:*) many-to-many (*:*) © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic Net of Staff “Manages” Branch Relationship Type
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Multiplicity of Staff “Manages” Branch (1:1) Relationship
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic Net of Staff “Oversees” PropertyForRent Relationship Type
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Multiplicity of Staff “Oversees” PropertyForRent (1:
Multiplicity of Staff “Oversees” PropertyForRent (1:*) Relationship Type © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic net of Newspaper “Advertises” PropertyForRent Relationship Type
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Multiplicity of Newspaper “Advertises” PropertyForRent (. :
Multiplicity of Newspaper “Advertises” PropertyForRent (*:*) Relationship © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Structural Constraints
Multiplicity for Complex Relationships Number (or range) of possible occurrences of an entity type in an n-ary relationship when other (n-1) values are fixed. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic Net of Ternary “Registers” Relationship with Values for Staff and Branch Entities Fixed
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Multiplicity of Ternary “Registers” Relationship
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Summary of Multiplicity Constraints
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Structural Constraints
Multiplicity is made up of two types of restrictions on relationships: cardinality and participation. Cardinality Describes maximum number of possible relationship occurrences for an entity participating in a given relationship type. Participation Determines whether all or only some entity occurrences participate in a relationship. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Multiplicity as Cardinality and Participation Constraints
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Problems with ER Models
Problems may arise when designing a conceptual data model called connection traps. Often due to a misinterpretation of the meaning of certain relationships. Two main types of connection traps are called fan traps and chasm traps. Fan Trap Where a model represents a relationship between entity types, but pathway between certain entity occurrences is ambiguous. Chasm Trap Where a model suggests the existence of a relationship between entity types, but pathway does not exist between certain entity occurrences. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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An Example of a Fan Trap © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic Net of ER Model with Fan Trap
At which branch office does staff number SG37 work? © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Restructuring ER Model to Remove Fan Trap
© Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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Semantic Net of Restructured ER Model with Fan Trap Removed
SG37 works at branch B003. © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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An Example of a Chasm Trap
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Semantic Net of ER Model with Chasm Trap
At which branch office is property PA14 available? © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005
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ER Model Restructured to Remove Chasm Trap
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Semantic Net of Restructured ER Model with Chasm Trap Removed
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Degrees of Relationship, Alternative Representation
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Object-Oriented Data Modeling
What Is Object-Oriented Data Modeling? Centers around objects and classes Involves inheritance Encapsulates both data and behavior Benefits of Object-Oriented Modeling Ability to tackle challenging problems Improved communication between users, analysts, designers, and programmers Increased consistency in analysis, design, and programming Explicit representation of commonality among system components System robustness Reusability of analysis, design, and programming results © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Classes and Objects Class: An entity that has a well-defined role in the application domain, as well as state, behavior, and identity Tangible: person, place or thing Concept or Event: department, performance, marriage, registration Artifact of the Design Process: user interface, controller, scheduler Object: a particular instance of a class Objects exhibit BEHAVIOR as well as attributes Different from entities © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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State, Behavior, Identity
State: attribute types and values Behavior: how an object acts and reacts Behavior is expressed through operations that can be performed on it Identity: every object has a unique identity, even if all of its attribute values are the same © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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UML Class and Object Diagram
Class diagram shows the static structure of an object-oriented model: object classes, internal structure, relationships © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Operation A function or service that is provided by all instances of a class Types of operations: Constructor: creates a new instance of a class Query: accesses the state of an object but does not alter its state Update: alters the state of an object Scope: operation applying to the class instead of an instance Operations implement the object’s behavior © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Associations Association: Named relationship among object classes Association Role: Role of an object in an association The end of an association where it connects to a class Multiplicity: How many objects participate in an association. Lower-bound…Upper-bound (cardinality) © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Examples of Association Relationships of Different Degree
Unary Lower-bound – upper-bound Represented as: 0..1, 0..*, 1..1, 1..* Similar to minimum/maximum cardinality rules in EER Ternary Binary © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Association Class An association that has attributes or operations of its own or that participates in relationships with other classes Like an associative entity in E-R model © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Class Diagram Showing Association Classes
Registration class implements a many-to-many association between Student and Course © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Generalization/Specialization
Subclass, superclass similar to subtype/supertype in EER Common attributes, relationships, and operations Disjoint vs. Overlapping Complete (total specialization) vs. incomplete (partial specialization) Abstract Class: no direct instances possible, but subclasses may have direct instances Concrete Class: direct instances possible © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Examples of Generalization, Inheritance, and Constraints - a) Employee Superclass with Three Subclasses An employee can only be one of these subclasses Shared attributes and operations An employee may be none of them Specialized attributes and operations
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© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Examples of Generalization, Inheritance, and Constraints – b) Abstract Patient Class with Two Concrete Subclasses Abstract indicated by italics A patient MUST be EXACTLY one of the subtypes Dynamic means a patient can change from one subclass to another over time © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Polymorphism Abstract Operation: Defines the form or protocol of the operation, but not its implementation Method: The implementation of an operation Polymorphism: The same operation may apply to two or more different classes in different ways © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Class-Scope Attribute
Specifies a value common to an entire class, rather than a specific value for an instance. Represented by underlining “=“ is initial, default value © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Polymorphism, Abstract Operation, Class-Scope Attribute, and Ordering
This operation is abstract…it has no method at Student level Class-scope attributes–only one value common to all instances of these classes (includes default values) Methods are defined at subclass level
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© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Aggregation Aggregation: A part-of relationship between a component object and an aggregate object Composition: A stronger form of aggregation in which a part object belongs to only one whole object and exists only as part of the whole object Recursive Aggregation: Composition where component object is an instance of the same class as the aggregate object © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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Example of Aggregation
A Personal Computer includes CPU, Hard Disk, Monitor, and Keyboard as parts. But, these parts can exist without being installed into a computer. The open diamond indicates aggregation, but not composition © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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References Hoffer et. al. Modern Database Management, The Tenth Edition, Pearson. Education, Kroenke and Auer. Database Concepts, 3rd Edition, Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2008. Elmasri and Navathe. Fundamentals of Database Systems, The Fifth Edition, Pearson. Education, Inc., 2007.
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