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Database Design

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Something of significance to business about which data must be known ... Animal entity instances like, Dalmatian, Siamese cat, cow, tiger ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Database Design


1
Database Design
  • Lessons 2 3Database Models, Entities,
    Relationships

2
Database Design
  • Conceptual
  • Analysis
  • What
  • Logical
  • Design
  • How
  • Physical
  • Build
  • Data
  • Information

3
An Entity
  • Something of significance to business about
    which data must be known
  • A name for the things that you can list
  • A single name of noun
  • Entities have Instances
  • Occurrences of entities
  • Rows

4
Entities vs. Instance
  • Entities can be
  • Tangible, like Person or Product
  • Nontangible, like skill level
  • An event, like concert, graduation, wedding
  • Instance examples
  • Animal entity instances like, Dalmatian, Siamese
    cat, cow, tiger
  • Car entity instances like, sedan, station wagon,
    SUV, convertible

5
Examples
  • Entity Product
  • New York instance
  • Director can be either an entity or instance
    context is important

6
Attributes
  • Entities have Attributes
  • Single-value property, detail of an entity
  • Piece of information that describes, qualifies,
    quantifies, classifies and/or specifies an entity
  • Property of an entity
  • Attributes have a data type

7
Attributes
  • Describe an entity
  • Attribute vs. attribute value
  • color vs. blue
  • animal type vs. dog
  • Can have one and only one value at a given point
    in time
  • One or more attributes must be defined as a
    unique identifier (UID)

8
Unique Identifier (UID)
  • Used to distinguish one instance of an entity
    from another
  • Example Student ID as a UID for student entity
  • part number as a UID for product entity
  • Social security number (UID) for employee
  • Denote with a

9
Attributes
  • Must be a single-values at any point in time
  • Should be stored in one and only one entity
  • Values have data type
  • Example entity CAR may have attributes model
    color (values of beetle, green)
  • An attribute may change over time

10
Attribute
  • Volatile may change with time, like age
  • should look for non-volatile attributes like
    birth date rather than age
  • Mandatory vs. Optional
  • email address mandatory for EMPLOYEE if modeling
    email application
  • email address optional for CUSTOMER is modeling
    an online catalog

11
Entity relationship diagram (ERD)
  • Visual way to display business requirements
  • Tool used in design stage
  • Used to react to, validate, and correct data in
    database
  • Entities should be implemetation-free

12
Relationship
  • Represents something significant to a business
  • Expresses how entities are mutually related
  • Always exist between entities
  • Always have two perspectives
  • Is named at both ends
  • Between two entities (or one entity and itself)

13
Conventions
  • Entities appear as all capital letters and
    singular
  • Relationships are italicized
  • Entities are placed in soft boxes (rounded
    corners)
  • Examples
  • EMPLOYEE hold JOBs
  • JOBs are held by EMPLOYEEs
  • PRODUCTs are classified by a PRODUCT TYPE
  • PRODUCT TYPE classifies a PRODUCT

14
Optionality of relationships
  • A relationship adds a link between entities
  • Relationships come from business rules

15
Optionality of relationships
  • Are either Mandatory or Optional
  • Mandatory value is a REQUIRED field
  • Use MUST to describe
  • Denoted with an and a solid line
  • Optional value may be supplier or not
  • Use MAY to describe
  • Denoted with a and a dashed line
  • Example
  • Each DEPARTMENT must have one or more EMPLOYEEs
  • Each DEPARTMENT may have one or more EMPLOYEEs

16
Identifying Relationships
  • Cardinality or Degree of relationship
  • Describes how many?
  • Use one and only one or one or more
  • use crow foot to denote one or more in ERD
  • Examples
  • Each DEPARTMENT may have one or more EMPLOYEEs
  • Each EMPLOYEE must be assigned to one and only
    one DEPARTMENT
  • See ERD on next slide

17
ERD
  • Entities use soft boxes

DEPARTMENT ID o name o location
EMPLOYEE ID first name last name o telephone
number o salary job
hire
assigned to
18
Examples
  • Each SEAT may be sold to one or more PASSENGERs
  • this example accounts for overbooking
  • Each PASSENGER may purchase one and only one SEAT

19
Entity naming
  • Name must be unique
  • Create a description of the entity (be explicit)
  • Be aware of homonyms
  • Market 16 to 25 years
  • Market Europe, Asia etc.
  • Avoid reserved words
  • Remove the relationship name from the entity name

20
ERD conventions - summary
  • Entities go in soft boxes
  • Entity names are singular and written in all
    capital letters
  • Attributes go under Entity
  • is a UID (unique identifier Key)
  • mandatory attribute
  • o optional attribute

21
ERD conventions - summary
  • Relationships are lines
  • solid are mandatory
  • dashed are optional
  • Lines terminations express cardinality
  • single toe denotes one and only one
  • crows foot denotes one or more

22
Example
  • Each HAIRSTYLIST may work on one or more CLIENTs
  • Each CLIENT must be assigned to one and only one
    HAIRSTYLIST
  • See next slide to ERD

23
ERD diagram
  • List entity and attributes
  • HAIRSTYLIST
  • id
  • first name
  • last name
  • address
  • phone number
  • social-security number
  • salary
  • CLIENT
  • client number
  • first nameo last nameo phone number

work on
assigned to
24
Conventions
  • Not a strict requirement (can reverse)

this crow is flying east
this crow is flying south
25
Matrix Diagram
  • 3.4.4

26
ERD
COUNTRY
TRAVELER
visit
visited by
the location of
located in
have seen
seen by
LANDMARK
27
Previous ERD
  • Note ERD included optionality and cardinality
  • Note there are several MM relationship. This is
    a valid relationship, but discussed in later
    chapters
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