0% found this document useful (0 votes)
198 views

Problem 17.7

1) The relationship between Sale and Receive Cash events for installment sales is many-to-many as a sale can have multiple cash receipts over time and cash receipts can be for multiple sales. 2) The relationship between Sale and Receive Cash events at a convenience store is one-to-one as each sale typically results in a single cash receipt at the time of sale. 3) The relationship between Take Customer Order and Sale events when multiple shipments are required to fill an order is many-to-many as a single order can result in multiple sales/shipments and a sale can fulfill parts of multiple orders.

Uploaded by

nhu nhu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
198 views

Problem 17.7

1) The relationship between Sale and Receive Cash events for installment sales is many-to-many as a sale can have multiple cash receipts over time and cash receipts can be for multiple sales. 2) The relationship between Sale and Receive Cash events at a convenience store is one-to-one as each sale typically results in a single cash receipt at the time of sale. 3) The relationship between Take Customer Order and Sale events when multiple shipments are required to fill an order is many-to-many as a single order can result in multiple sales/shipments and a sale can fulfill parts of multiple orders.

Uploaded by

nhu nhu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

17.7.

Model the cardinalities of the following business policies:

a. The relationship between the Sale and Receive Cash events for installment sales.

Sale
Sales Received Cash

b. The relationship between the Sale and Receive Cash events at a convenience store.

Sale
Sales Received Cash

c. The Take Customer Order–Sale relationship in a situation when occasionally several shipments are
required to fill an order because some items were out of stock.

Take Customer
Sale
Order
Sales

d. The Sale–Inventory relationship for a custom homebuilder.

Sale
Sales Inventory

e. The relationship between the Sale and Receive Cash events for Dell computers, which requires
customers to pay the entire amount of their purchase in advance, prior to Dell shipping the merchandise

Sale
Sales Received Cash
f. The relationship between the Sale and Receive Cash events for a retail store that has some in-store sales
paid in full by customers at the time of the sale but that also makes some in-store sales to customers on
credit, billing them later and permitting them to make installment payments.

Sale
Sales Received Cash

g. The relationship between the Receive Inventory and Disburse Cash events in the case where suppliers
require payment in advance, in full.

Sale
Receive Inventory Disburse Cash

h. The relationship between the Call on Customers event (i.e., the visit by a salesperson to a potential
customer) and the Take Customer Order event for a business that is only conducted door-to-door (e.g.,
kitchen knives, certain books) so that the only way to order the items is when a salesperson visits the
customer. (Hint: Do you think every call results in an order?)

Take Customer
Call onSale
Customers
Order

i. The relationship between the Call on Customers and Take Customer Orders events for a
manufacturer which also accepts orders on its website.

Take Customer
Call onSale
Customers
Orders

j. The relationship between the Receive Inventory and Disburse Cash events for a company which
receives monthly bills from its suppliers for all purchases made the previous month; some suppliers
require payment of the entire bill, in full, within 30 days or they will not accept any subsequent orders,
but other suppliers accept installment payments.

Sale
Receive Inventory Disburse Cash

You might also like