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Data Modeling Using Entity

The document outlines the principles of data modeling using Entity-Relationship and Relational Models, emphasizing the importance of high-level conceptual data models for database design. It covers key concepts such as entity types, attributes, relationship types, and the conversion of ER schemas to relational schemas, along with design considerations and constraints. Additionally, it discusses specialization and generalization in data modeling, as well as the structure and characteristics of relational databases.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
7 views

Data Modeling Using Entity

The document outlines the principles of data modeling using Entity-Relationship and Relational Models, emphasizing the importance of high-level conceptual data models for database design. It covers key concepts such as entity types, attributes, relationship types, and the conversion of ER schemas to relational schemas, along with design considerations and constraints. Additionally, it discusses specialization and generalization in data modeling, as well as the structure and characteristics of relational databases.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Data Modeling Using Entity-Relational Model and Relational Model (10 LHs)

1. Using High-Level Conceptual Data Models for Database Design


• High-Level Conceptual Data Models:
o Used to represent the real-world entities and relationships in a database design.
o Provides a clear and user-friendly overview of the structure and constraints of the
database.
o Commonly used models include the Entity-Relationship (ER) model.
• Purpose:
o Simplifies communication between stakeholders (e.g., users, developers, and
designers).
o Acts as the blueprint for detailed database design.

2. Entity Types, Entity Sets, Attributes, and Keys


• Entity Types:
o Represents a group of objects with the same attributes.
o Example: "Student," "Employee."
• Entity Sets:
o A collection of entities of the same type.
o Example: All students in a university form a "Student" entity set.
• Attributes:
o Describes the properties of an entity.
o Types:
▪ Simple Attributes: Atomic values (e.g., Name, Age).
▪ Composite Attributes: Can be divided into smaller parts (e.g., Full Name
-> First Name, Last Name).
▪ Derived Attributes: Can be derived from other attributes (e.g., Age from
Date of Birth).
▪ Multivalued Attributes: Can have multiple values (e.g., Phone Numbers).
• Keys:
o Primary Key: Uniquely identifies an entity in an entity set.
o Candidate Key: A set of attributes that could serve as a primary key.
o Composite Key: A primary key composed of multiple attributes.

3. Relationship Types, Relationship Sets, Roles, and Structural Constraints


• Relationship Types:
o Defines the association between two or more entities.
o Example: "Enrolls" between "Student" and "Course."
• Relationship Sets:
o A collection of relationships of the same type.
o Example: All enrollments of students in courses.
• Roles:
o Specifies the part played by an entity in a relationship.
o Example: In a "Teaches" relationship, "Professor" plays the role of teacher.
• Structural Constraints:
o Defines the rules of participation:
▪ Cardinality: Specifies the number of entities involved (e.g., 1:1, 1:N,
M:N).
▪ Participation: Can be total (mandatory) or partial (optional).

4. Weak Entity Types


• Definition:
o Entities that cannot be uniquely identified by their attributes alone.
o Requires a "strong entity" and a "foreign key" for identification.
• Key Features:
o Always associated with a "strong entity".
o Has a "discriminator" (partial key) to distinguish between weak entities.
o Depicted with a double rectangle in ER diagrams.
• Example:
o "Dependent" weak entity associated with the "Employee" strong entity.

5. ER Diagrams, Naming Conventions, and Design Issues


• ER Diagrams:
o Graphical representation of entities, attributes, and relationships.
o Symbols:
▪ Rectangle: Entity type.
▪ Ellipse: Attribute.
▪ Diamond: Relationship type.
▪ Double Ellipse: Multivalued attribute.
▪ Double Rectangle: Weak entity.
• Naming Conventions:
o Use singular nouns for entities.
o Use meaningful names for relationships.
o Avoid abbreviations unless necessary.
• Design Issues:
o Redundancy: Avoid duplicating information.
o Complexity: Simplify the design for clarity.
o Consistency: Ensure the schema aligns with real-world requirements.

6. Relationship Types of Degree Higher Than Two


• Higher-Degree Relationships:
o Involves more than two entities.
o Example: "ProjectAssignment" relationship between "Employee," "Project," and
"Role."
• Challenges:
o More complex to model and understand.
o Often can be decomposed into simpler binary relationships.
7. Concepts of Specialization and Generalization
• Specialization:
o Process of creating sub-classes from a super-class.
o Example: "Employee" specialized into "Manager" and "Technician."
o Represents "is-a" relationships.
• Generalization:
o Process of combining multiple classes into a super-class.
o Example: "Car" and "Truck" generalized into "Vehicle."
• Characteristics:
o Disjoint Specialization: An entity belongs to only one subclass.
o Overlapping Specialization: An entity can belong to multiple subclasses.

8. Constraints and Characteristics of Specialization and Generalization


• Constraints:
o Disjointness Constraint: Specifies whether subclasses are disjoint.
o Completeness Constraint: Specifies whether all entities in the superclass must
belong to a subclass (total or partial).
• Characteristics:
o Reflects real-world hierarchies.
o Simplifies data modeling by grouping similar entities.

9. Converting ER Schema to Relational Schema


• Steps:
1. Convert each entity type to a table with attributes.
2. Convert relationships:
▪ 1:1 relationships: Add a foreign key to one of the tables.
▪ 1:N relationships: Add a foreign key to the "N" side.
▪ M:N relationships: Create a separate table with foreign keys from both
entities.
3. Handle multivalued attributes by creating separate tables.
4. Represent weak entities with foreign keys referencing strong entities.
• Example:
o ER Diagram with "Student" and "Course" entities and an "Enrolls" relationship
converts into:
▪ Student(StudentID, Name, Age)
▪ Course(CourseID, Title)
▪ Enrolls(StudentID, CourseID, EnrollDate)

10. Structure of the Relational Database


• Definition:
o A database structured to recognize relations among stored items.
• Components:
o Tables (Relations): Represent entities and relationships.
o Rows (Tuples): Represent individual records.
o Columns (Attributes): Represent properties of the entity.
• Characteristics:
o Data is stored in a tabular format.
o Primary and foreign keys enforce relationships and constraints.
o Supports SQL for querying and manipulating data.

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