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"Database Systems": Book: Modern Database Management

This document provides an overview of a course on database systems. The key points are: 1) The course will cover basic database concepts, relational database design, and developing databases using Oracle. Students will learn how to independently develop a database system. 2) The document defines database terminology and outlines the objectives of understanding database growth, limitations of conventional file processing, database categories, and relational database advantages. 3) By taking the course, students are expected to understand database concepts and design, and be able to develop a database using Oracle forms and reports.

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Rimsha Awan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
105 views35 pages

"Database Systems": Book: Modern Database Management

This document provides an overview of a course on database systems. The key points are: 1) The course will cover basic database concepts, relational database design, and developing databases using Oracle. Students will learn how to independently develop a database system. 2) The document defines database terminology and outlines the objectives of understanding database growth, limitations of conventional file processing, database categories, and relational database advantages. 3) By taking the course, students are expected to understand database concepts and design, and be able to develop a database using Oracle forms and reports.

Uploaded by

Rimsha Awan
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 PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 35

“DATABASE SYSTEMS”

Book:
Modern Database Management

Jeffrey A. Hoffer,
Mary B. Prescott,
Fred R. McFadden
Instructor: Ayesha Siddiqa
We will study this course

 to understand the basic concepts of


Database
 to learn the design issues of a relational
database
 to learn the development of relational
database systems using oracle
 to get hands on with oracle forms and
reports

3
Goal
 At the end of this course it is
expected that each student must be
able to develop a database System
independently

4
Objectives
 Definition of terms
 Explain growth and importance of databases
 Name limitations of conventional file
processing
 Identify five categories of databases
 Explain advantages of databases
 Identify costs and risks of databases
 List components of database environment
 Describe evolution of database systems

5
Definitions

 Database: organized collection of logically


related data
 Data: stored representations of meaningful
objects and events
 Structured: numbers, text, dates
 Easily searchable
 Unstructured: images, video, documents
 Not easily searchable

 Information: data processed to increase


knowledge in the person using the data
 Metadata: data that describes the properties and
context of user data
6
Figure 1-1a Data in context

Context helps users understand data


Figure 1-1b Summarized data

Graphical displays turn data into useful


information that managers can use for
decision making and interpretation
Descriptions of the properties or characteristics of the
data, including data types, field sizes, allowable
values, and data context
Disadvantages of File Processing

 Program-Data Dependence
 All programs maintain metadata for each file they use
 Duplication of Data
 Different systems/programs have separate copies of the
same data
 Limited Data Sharing
 No centralized control of data
 Lengthy Development Times
 Programmers must design their own file formats
 Excessive Program Maintenance
 80% of information systems budget
10
Problems with Data Dependency
 Each application programmer must
maintain his/her own data
 Each application program needs to include
code for the metadata of each file
 Each application program must have its
own processing routines for reading,
inserting, updating, and deleting data
 Lack of coordination and central control
 Non-standard file formats

11
Figure 1-3 Old file processing systems at Pine Valley
Furniture Company
Duplicate Data
Problems with Data
Redundancy
 Waste of space to have duplicate
data
 Causes more maintenance
headaches
 The biggest problem:
 Data changes in one file could
cause inconsistencies
 Compromises in data integrity
13
SOLUTION:
The DATABASE Approach
 Central repository of shared data
 Data is managed by a controlling
agent
 Stored in a standardized,
convenient form

Requires a Database Management System (DBMS)


14
Database Management System
 A software system that is used to create, maintain, and
provide controlled access to user databases

Order Filing
System

Invoicing Central database


DBMS
System
Contains employee,
order, inventory,
pricing, and
Payroll
customer data
System

DBMS manages data resources like an operating system manages hardware resources
15
Advantages of the Database Approach
 Program-data independence
 Planned data redundancy
 Improved data consistency
 Improved data sharing
 Increased application development
productivity
 Enforcement of standards
 Improved data quality
 Improved data accessibility and
responsiveness
 Reduced program maintenance
 Improved decision support
16
Costs and Risks of the Database
Approach

 New, specialized personnel


 Installation and management cost and
complexity
 Conversion costs
 Need for explicit backup and recovery
 Organizational conflict

17
Elements of the Database Approach

 Data models
 Graphical system capturing nature and relationship of
data

 Enterprise Data Model – high-level entities and


relationships for the organization

 Project Data Model – more detailed view, matching


data structure in database or data warehouse

18
Elements of the Database Approach
Cont ….
 Relational Databases
 Database technology involving tables (relations)
representing entities and primary/foreign keys
representing relationships
 Use of Internet Technology
 Networks and telecommunications, distributed
databases, client-server, and 3-tier architectures
 Database Applications
 Application programs used to perform database
activities (create, read, update, and delete) for
database users

19
Segment of an Enterprise Data Model

Segment of a Project-Level Data Model


One customer
may place many
orders, but each
order is placed by
a single customer
 One-to-many
relationship
One order has
many order lines;
each order line is
associated with a
single order
 One-to-many
relationship
One product can
be in many
order lines, each
order line refers
to a single
product
 One-to-many
relationship
Therefore, one
order involves
many products
and one product is
involved in many
orders

 Many-to-many
relationship
Figure 1-4 Enterprise data model for Figure 1-3 segments
Figure 1-5 Components of the Database Environment
Components of the
Database Environment
 CASE Tools – computer-aided software engineering
 Repository – centralized storehouse of metadata
 Database Management System (DBMS) –software
for managing the database
 Database – storehouse of the data
 Application Programs – software using the data
 User Interface – text and graphical displays to users
 Data/Database Administrators – personnel
responsible for maintaining the database
 System Developers – personnel responsible for
designing databases and software
 End Users – people who use the applications and
databases

27
The Range of Database Applications

 Personal databases
 Workgroup databases
 Departmental/divisional databases
 Enterprise database
 Web-enabled databases

28
Figure 1-6
Typical data
from a
personal
database
Figure 1-7 Workgroup database with wireless
local area network
Enterprise Database Applications
 Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
 Integrate all enterprise functions
(manufacturing, finance, sales, marketing,
inventory, accounting, human resources)
 Data Warehouse
 Integrated decision support system
derived from various operational
databases

32
Figure 1-8 An enterprise data warehouse
Evolution of DB Systems
THANK YOU

35

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