Title: Exam 1 Review
1Exam 1 Review
- Dr. Bernard Chen Ph.D.
- University of Central Arkansas
2Database System
- Database
- A collection of related data.
- Data
- Known facts that can be recorded and have an
- implicit meaning.
- Database Management System (DBMS)
- A software package/ system to facilitate the
- creation and maintenance of a computerized
- database.
- Database System
- DBMS Database
3Database V.S. File
- In the database approach, a single repository of
data is maintained that is defined once then
accessed by various users - The major differences between DB and File are
- Self-describing of a DB
- Insulation between programs and data
- Support of multiple views of the data
- Sharing of data and multiuser transaction
processing
4Self-describing nature of a database system
- Database system contains not only the database
itself but also a complete definition of the
database structure and constrains - The information stored in the catalog is called
Meta-data (data about data), and it describes the
structure of the primary database.
5Categories of data models
- High-level or Conceptual data models
- Provide concept that are close to the way many
users perceive data - Low-level or Physical data model
- Provide concepts that describe the details of how
data is stored in the computer
6Conceptual data models
- It uses concepts such as entities, attributes and
relationships. - Entity represents a real-world object or concept,
such as employee or project - Attribute represents some property of interest
that further describes an entity, such as
employees name or salary - Relation among two or more entities represents an
association among two or more entitles
7Example of a Database Schema
8Schemas and Database State
- The data in the database at a particular moment
in time is called a database state - The distinction between database schema and
database state is very important - When we define a new database, we specify its
database schema only to the DBMS - At this point, the corresponding database state
is the empty state with no data - We get the initial state of the database when the
database is first loaded - From then on, every time an update operation is
applied to the database, we get another database
state
9Three-Schema Architecture
- Defines DBMS schemas at three levels
- Internal schema at the internal level to describe
physical storage structures and access paths (e.g
indexes). - Conceptual schema at the conceptual level to
describe the structure and constraints for the
whole database for a community of users. - External schemas at the external level to
describe the various user views.
10The three-schema architecture
11Centralized DBMS Architecture
- A centralized DBMS in which all the DBMS
functionality, application program execution, and
user interface processing were carried out on a
single machine - The client/server architecture was developed to
deal with computer environment in which a large
number of PCs, workstation, file server - This is called two-tire architectures because the
software components are distributed over two
systems client and server - The emergence of the Web changed the roles of
client and server, leading to the three-tier
architecture
12A Physical Centralized Architecture
13Logical two-tier client server architecture
14Three-tier client-server architecture
15Entities and Attributes
- The most basic object that the ER model
represents is an entity - An entity maybe an object with a physical
existence (a person, a car, house) or it maybe
an object with conceptual existence (a company, a
job, or a course) - Each entity has Attributes --- the particular
properties that describe it
16Attributes
- Several types of attribute occur in the ER model
- Simple vs. Composite
- Single value vs. Multi-value
- Stored vs. Derived
17Composite vs. Simple Attributes
- Composite attributes can be divided into smaller
subparts. - For example Address attribute of the EMPLOYEE
entity can be further subdivided into
street_address, city, state, zip_code - Simple attributes can not be further divisible
- For example, street_address can be subdivided
into Number, street, and apt - The value of composite attribute is the
concatenation of the values of its constituent
simple attributes
18Single value vs. Multi-value
- Most attributes have a single value for a
particular entity such attribute are called
single-valued - In some cases an attribute can have a set of
value for the same entity --- for example, colors
attribute for a car, or a college_degree for a
person - Such attributes are called multivalued
- A multivalued attribute may have lower and upper
bonds to constrain the number of values allowed
for each entity
19Stored vs. Derived
- In some cases, two (or more) attribute calues are
related --- for example, the Age and Birth_date
of a person - The Age attribute is called a derived attribute
and is said to be derived from the Birth_date
attribute, which is called a stored value
20Key Attributes
- An important constrain on the entities of an
entity type is the KEY on attributes - An attribute of an entity type for which each
entity must have a unique value is called a key
attribute of the entity type. - For example, SSN of EMPLOYEE.
21Relationship
- The initial design is typically not complete
- Refining the initial design by introducing
relationships - ER model has three main concepts
- Entities (and their entity types and entity sets)
- Attributes (simple, composite, multivalued)
- Relationships (and their relationship types and
relationship sets)
22Recursive Relationship
- In some cases, the same entity type participates
more than once in a relationship type in
different roles - Example Employee and supervised
23ER DIAGRAM
24Weak Entity Types
- Entity types do not have key attribute of their
own are called weak entity types - In contrast, regular entity types that do have
key attribute are called strong entity types - A weak entity type normally has a partial key,
which is the set of attributes that can uniquely
identify weak entities that are related to the
same owner entity
25Weak Entity Type
- Weak entity types can sometimes be represented as
complex attributes - Complex Attributes combination of composite and
multi-valued attributes - In the example, we could specify a multi-valued
attribute Dependents for EMPLOYEE, which is a
composite attribute with component attributes
Name, Birthday, Sex and Relationship
26Subclasses, Superclasses and Inheritance
- We call each of these subgroupings a subclass of
the EMPLOYEE entity type, and the EMPLOYEE entity
type is called the superclass for each of these
subclasses. - These are called superclass/subclass (as well as
simply class/subclass) relationships - EMPLOYEE/SECRETARY
- EMPLOYEE/TECHNICIAN
- EMPLOYEE/MANAGER
-
- These are also called IS-A relationships
- SECRETARY IS-A EMPLOYEE, TECHNICIAN IS-A
EMPLOYEE, .
27Subclasses and Superclasses
28Subclasses, Superclasses and Inheritance
- An important concept associated with subclasses
is that of type inheritance - An entity that is member of a subclass inherits
- All attributes of the entity as a member of the
superclass - All relationships of the entity as a member of
the superclass
29Constraints on Specialization and Generalization
- Two basic constraints can apply to a
specialization/generalization - Disjointness Constraint
- Specifies that the subclasses of the
specialization must be disjoint an entity can be
a member of at most one of the subclasses of the
specialization - Completeness Constraint
- If not disjoint, specialization is
overlapping
30Displaying an attribute-defined specialization in
EER diagrams
31Example of overlapping total Specialization
32Constraints on Specialization and Generalization
- Completeness Constraint
- Total specifies that every entity in the
superclass must be a member of some subclass in
the specialization/generalization - Shown in EER diagrams by a double line
- Partial allows an entity not to belong to any of
the subclasses - Shown in EER diagrams by a single line
- In general, a superclass that was identified
through the generalization process usually total,
because the superclass is derived from the
subclasses and hence contains only the entities
that are in the subclass
33Specialization/Generalization Hierarchies,
Lattices
- A subclass may itself have further subclasses
specified on it - Hierarchy has a constraint that every subclass
has only one superclass (called single
inheritance) this is basically a tree structure - In a lattice, a subclass can be subclass of more
than one superclass (called multiple inheritance)
34Union
- All of the superclass/subclass relationships we
have seen so far origin from a single superclass - Sometimes we may need more than one superclass
- In this case, the subclass will represent a
collection of objects that is a subset of the
UNION of distinct entity types - We call such a subclass a UNION TYPE
35UNION
- Attribute inheritance works more selectively in
the case of UNION. - For example, OWNER entity inherits attributes of
a COMPANY, a PERSON OR a BANK - A shared subclass such as ENGINEERING_MANAGER
inherits ALL the attributes of its superclasses
36Two categories (UNION types) OWNER,
REGISTERED_VEHICLE