Chapter 3
The Relational Model
Transparencies
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Chapter 3 - Objectives
Terminology of relational model.
How tables are used to represent data.
Connection between mathematical relations
and relations in the relational model.
Properties of database relations.
How to identify CK, PK, and FKs.
Meaning of entity integrity and referential
integrity.
Purpose and advantages of views.
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Relational Model Terminology
A relation is a table with columns and rows.
– Only applies to logical structure of the
database, not the physical structure.
Attribute is a named column of a relation.
Domain is the set of allowable values for one or
more attributes.
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Relational Model Terminology
Tuple is a row of a relation.
Degree is the number of attributes in a relation.
Cardinality is the number of tuples in a relation.
Relational Database is a collection of normalized
relations with distinct relation names.
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Instances of Branch and Staff Relations
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Examples of Attribute Domains
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Alternative Terminology for Relational Model
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Mathematical Definition of Relation
Consider two sets, D1 & D2, where D1 = {2, 4} and D2
= {1, 3, 5}.
Cartesian product, D1 D2, is set of all ordered
pairs, where first element is member of D1 and
second element is member of D2.
D1 D2 = {(2, 1), (2, 3), (2, 5), (4, 1), (4, 3), (4, 5)}
Alternative way is to find all combinations of
elements with first from D1 and second from D2.
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Mathematical Definition of Relation
Any subset of Cartesian product is a relation; e.g.
R = {(2, 1), (4, 1)}
May specify which pairs are in relation using
some condition for selection; e.g.
– second element is 1:
R = {(x, y) | x D1, y D2, and y = 1}
– first element is always twice the second:
S = {(x, y) | x D1, y D2, and x = 2y}
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Mathematical Definition of Relation
Consider three sets D1, D2, D3 with Cartesian
Product D1 D2 D3; e.g.
D1 = {1, 3} D2 = {2, 4} D3 = {5, 6}
D1 D2 D3 = {(1,2,5), (1,2,6), (1,4,5), (1,4,6),
(3,2,5), (3,2,6), (3,4,5), (3,4,6)}
Any subset of these ordered triples is a relation.
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Mathematical Definition of Relation
Cartesian product of n sets (D1, D2, . . ., Dn) is:
D1 D2 . . .Dn = {(d1, d2, . . . , dn) | d1 D1, d2
D2, . . . , dnDn}
usually written as:
n
XDi
i=1
Any set of n-tuples from this Cartesian product
is a relation on the n sets.
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Database Relations
Relation schema
– Named relation defined by a set of attribute and
domain name pairs.
Relational database schema
– Set of relation schemas, each with a distinct name.
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Properties of Relations
Relation name is distinct from all other relation
names in relational schema.
Each cell of relation contains exactly one atomic
(single) value.
Each attribute has a distinct name.
Values of an attribute are all from the same
domain.
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Properties of Relations
Each tuple is distinct; there are no duplicate
tuples.
Order of attributes has no significance.
Order of tuples has no significance, theoretically.
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Relational Keys
Superkey (primary key)
– An attribute, or set of attributes, that uniquely
identifies a tuple within a relation.
Candidate Key
– In each tuple of R, values of K uniquely identify that
tuple (uniqueness).
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Relational Keys
Alternate Keys
– Candidate keys that are not selected to be primary
key.
Foreign Key
– Attribute, or set of attributes, within one relation
that matches candidate key of some (possibly same)
relation.
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Integrity Constraints
Null
– Represents value for an attribute that is
currently unknown or not applicable for tuple.
– Deals with incomplete or exceptional data.
– Represents the absence of a value and is not the
same as zero or spaces, which are values.
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Integrity Constraints
Entity Integrity
– In a base relation, no attribute of a primary
key can be null.
Referential Integrity
– If foreign key exists in a relation, either
foreign key value must match a candidate
key value of some tuple in its home relation
or foreign key value must be wholly null.
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Integrity Constraints
General Constraints
– Additional rules specified by users or
database administrators that define or
constrain some aspect of the enterprise.
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Views
Base Relation
– Named relation corresponding to an entity
in conceptual schema, whose tuples are
physically stored in database.
View
– Dynamic result of one or more relational
operations operating on base relations to
produce another relation.
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Views
A virtual relation that does not necessarily
actually exist in the database but is produced
upon request, at time of request.
Contents of a view are defined as a query on one
or more base relations.
Views are dynamic, meaning that changes made
to base relations that affect view attributes are
immediately reflected in the view.
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Purpose of Views
Provides powerful and flexible security
mechanism by hiding parts of database from
certain users.
Permits users to access data in a customized
way, so that same data can be seen by different
users in different ways, at same time.
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Updating Views
All updates to a base relation should be
immediately reflected in all views that
reference that base relation.
If view is updated, underlying base relation
should reflect change.
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Updating Views
There are restrictions on types of modifications
that can be made through views:
– Updates are allowed if query involves a single
base relation and contains a candidate key of
base relation.
– Updates are not allowed involving multiple base
relations.
– Updates are not allowed involving aggregation
or grouping operations.
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