IS 4420 Database Fundamentals Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Leon Chen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Entity-Relationship (ER) Modeling
Advertisements

Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling
Database Systems: Design, Implementation, and Management Eighth Edition Chapter 4 Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling.
Systems Development Life Cycle
Data Modeling is an Analysis Activity
1 © Prentice Hall, 2002 Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 6 th Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer, Mary B. Prescott, Fred.
Entity Relationship Model
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 1 David M. Kroenke Database Processing Eighth Edition Chapter 3 The Entity- Relationship Model.
Entity-Relation Modeling Hun Myoung Park, Ph.D., Public Management and Policy Analysis Program Graduate School of International Relations International.
Database Design & Mapping
System Analysis - Data Modeling
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization
DATABASE APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT SAK 3408
Chapter 4 ENTITY-RELATIONSHIP MODELLING.
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization
Database Systems: Design, Implementation, & Management, 5 th Edition, Rob & Coronel 1 Data Models: Degrees of Data Abstraction l Modified ANSI/SPARC Framework.
CHAPTER 2: MODELING DATA IN THE ORGANIZATION © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Modern Database Management 11 th Edition Jeffrey.
Chapter 4 Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling
Chapter 4 Entity-Relationship modeling Transparencies © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005.
Chapter 3 © 2005 by Prentice Hall 1 Objectives Definition of terms Definition of terms Importance of data modeling Importance of data modeling Write good.
© 2007 by Prentice Hall (Hoffer, Prescott & McFadden) 1 Entity Relationship Diagrams (ERDs)
1 © Prentice Hall, 2002 Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 7th Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer, Mary B. Prescott, Fred R.
1 © Prentice Hall, 2002 CMIS564: E/R Modeling Dr. Bordoloi Based on Chapter 3; Modern Database Management 6 th Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer, Mary B. Prescott,
1 © Prentice Hall, 2002 Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 6 th Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer, Mary B. Prescott, Fred.
1 Web-Enabled Decision Support Systems Entity-Relationship Modeling Prof. Name Position (123) University Name.
3.1 CSIS 3310 Chapter 3 The Entity-Relationship Model Conceptual Data Modeling.
DeSiamorewww.desiamore.com/ifm1 Database Management Systems (DBMS)  B. Computer Science and BSc IT Year 1.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Chapter 2: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 10 th Edition Jeffrey.
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization
Data Modeling ERM ERD.
Chapter 5 Entity–Relationship Modeling
Chapter 2: Modeling Data in the Organization
MIS 385/MBA 664 Systems Implementation with DBMS/ Database Management Dave Salisbury ( )
4 1 Chapter 4 Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling Database Systems: Design, Implementation, and Management, Sixth Edition, Rob and Coronel.
DATABASEMODELSDATABASEMODELS  A database model ◦ defines the logical design of data. ◦ Describes the relationships between different parts of data.
CHAPTER 2: MODELING DATA IN THE ORGANIZATION © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Modern Database Management 11 th Edition Jeffrey.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Chapter 2: Modeling Data in the Organization.
CHAPTER 2: MODELING DATA IN THE ORGANIZATION © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Modern Database Management 11 th Edition Jeffrey.
1 Relational Databases and SQL. Learning Objectives Understand techniques to model complex accounting phenomena in an E-R diagram Develop E-R diagrams.
© Pearson Education Limited, Chapter 7 Entity-Relationship modeling Transparencies.
Chapter 4 Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling.  ER model forms the basis of an ER diagram  ERD represents conceptual database as viewed by end user 
Chapter 12 Entity-Relationship Modeling Pearson Education © 2009.
Chapter 11 & 12 Entity-Relationship (E-R) Model Characteristics of E-R Model Components of E-R Model Example of E-R Model Enhanced E-R Model.
DeSiamorePowered by DeSiaMore1 Database Management Systems (DBMS)  B. Computer Science and BSc IT Year 1.
3 & 4 1 Chapters 3 and 4 Drawing ERDs October 16, 2006 Week 3.
Chapter 2 © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter 2: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 11 th Edition.
Chapter 9: Logical Database Design and the Relational Model (ERD Mapping)
Msigwaemhttp//:msigwaem.ueuo.com/1 Database Management Systems (DBMS)  B. Computer Science and BSc IT Year 1.
Carnegie Mellon University © Robert T. Monroe Management Information Systems Data Modeling Management Information Systems Robert.
Databases Illuminated Chapter 3 The Entity Relationship Model.
MIS 385/MBA 664 Systems Implementation with DBMS/ Database Management
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization. Business Rules Statements that define or constrain some aspect of the business Assert business structure.
Entity-Relationship Modeling. 2 Entity Type u Entity type –Group of objects with same properties, identified by enterprise as having an independent existence.
Copyright © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Modern Database Management 12 th Edition Jeff Hoffer, Ramesh Venkataraman, Heikki Topi CHAPTER 2: MODELING DATA.
© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 9 th Edition Jeffrey.
Pree Thiengburanathum, CAMT, Chiang Mai University 1 Database System Modeling Data in the Organization October 31, 2009 Software Park, Bangkok Thailand.
Chapter 2: Modeling Data in the Organization
Chapter 3 1 Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization.
© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1 Lecture 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Modern Database Management 9 th Edition Jeffrey.
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization
TMC2034 Database Concept and Design
Overview of Entity‐Relationship Model
Review of Week 1 Database DBMS File systems vs. database systems
Fundamentals of Databases CSU 07203
Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization
Chapter 4 Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling
Presentation transcript:

IS 4420 Database Fundamentals Chapter 3: Modeling Data in the Organization Leon Chen

2 Systems Development Life Cycle Project Identification and Selection Project Initiation and Planning Analysis Physical Design Implementation Maintenance Logical Design Enterprise modeling Conceptual data modeling Logical database design Physical database design and definition Database implementation Database maintenance Database Dev e lopment Process

3 Overview What is data modeling Importance of data modeling Business rules Entity-relationship model: entities, relationships, and attributes

4 Conceptual Data Modeling Business Rules -Data names -Data definitions Conceptual Data Model (Entity-Relationship Diagram)

5 Data Modeling is the Most Important Input for follow-up processes Data rather than (piuttosto che) processes are the most complex Data tend to be more stable than business processes (I dati tendono ad essere più stabili dei processi)

6 Business Rules Statements that define or constrain some aspect of the business. For example:  Friday is business casual dress day  Students can only register a course if prerequisite is successfully completed Automated through DBMS software

7 Entity-Relationship Model A logical representation of the data for an organization or for a business area 3 constructs:  Entity - person, place, object, event, concept (often corresponds to a row in a table)  Attribute - property or characteristic of an entity (often corresponds to a field in a table)  Relationship – link between entities (corresponds to primary key-foreign key equivalencies in related tables)  Type vs. instance Entity type: Instructor Entity instance: Leon Chen Entity-Relationship Diagram  A graphical representation of entity-relationship model  Also called E-R diagram or just ERD STUDENT Name Registers

8 Sample E-R Diagram (Figure 3-1) Supplier_ID Supplier_Name Supplier_Address Attribute

9 Entity Person: EMPLOYEE, STUDENT Place: WAREHOUSE, COUNTRY Object: BUILDING, MACHINE Event: SALE, REGISTRATION Concept: ACCOUNT, COURSE EMPLOYEE DEPENDENT Strong entity Weak entity Associative entity CERTIFICATE

10 What Should an Entity Be? SHOULD BE:  An object that will have many instances in the database  An object that will be composed of multiple attributes  An object that we are trying to model SHOULD NOT BE:  A user of the database system  An output of the database system (e.g. a report )

11 Attribute Attribute - property or characteristic of an entity type Classifications of attributes:  Required vs. Optional Attributes  Simple vs. Composite Attribute  Single-Valued vs. Multivalued Attribute  Stored vs. Derived Attributes  Identifier Attributes - keys

12 Required vs. Optional Attributes Example: entity – ONLINE_ACCOUNT  Required attributes (Not NULL) Account_ID Password Owner_Name  Optional attributes Phone_Number Password_Hint

13 Figure 3-7 – A composite attribute An attribute broken into component parts

14 Figure 3-8 – Entity with a multivalued attribute (Skill) and derived attribute (Years_Employed) Derived from date employed and current date Multivalued: an employee can have more than one skill (speaks Chinese, plays tennis)

15 Figure 3-19 – An attribute that is both multivalued and composite This is an example of time-stamping. More examples?

16 Identifiers (Keys) Identifier (Key) - An attribute (or combination of attributes) that uniquely identifies individual instances of an entity type Candidate Key – an attribute that could be a key. Examples (for STUDENT, PERSON)? Simple Key versus Composite Key

17 Figure 3-9a Simple key attribute The key is underlined

18 Figure 3-9b Composite key attribute Flight_NumberDate

19 Guidelines for Identifiers Will not change in value Will not be null Substitute new, simple keys for long, composite keys  ?  Game_Number

20 Relationship Relationship Type vs. Relationship Instance Degree (grado) of a relationship Cardinality of a relationship (Associative Entity – combination of relationship and entity)

21 Figure 3-11a The relationship type is modeled as the diamond and lines between entity types attribute of the relationship

22 Relationship Instance is between specific entity instances

23 One entity related to another of the same entity type Entities of two different types related to each other Entities of three different types related to each other Degree of a relationship is the number of entity types that participate in it

24 Cardinality of a Relationship One-to-One  Each entity in the relationship will have exactly one related entity One-to-Many  An entity on one side of the relationship can have many related entities, but an entity on the other side will have a maximum of one related entity Many-to-Many  Entities on both sides of the relationship can have many related entities on the other side

25

26

27 Note: a relationship can have attributes of its own

28 Cardinality Constraints Cardinality Constraints - the number of instances of one entity that can or must be associated with each instance of another entity Minimum Cardinality. Examples?  If zero, then optional  If one or more, then mandatory Maximum Cardinality. Examples?  The maximum number

29 Cardinalities Mandatory one Mandatory many Optional one Optional many 11 18

30 Figure 3-16a Basic relationship Mandatory minimum cardinalities – Figure 3-17a

31 Figure 3-17c Optional cardinalities with unary degree, one-to-one relationship

32 max cardinality constraint Maximum Cardinality Constraint

33 Entities can be related to one another in more than one way

34 Attributes can be transformed to relationships Attributes or Relationship?

35 Attributes should be transformed to relationships Attributes or Relationship?

36 OPZIONALE(Associative Entities) It’s an entity – it has attributes AND it’s a relationship – it links entities together When should a relationship with attributes be an associative entity ?  All relationships for the associative entity should be many  The associative entity could have meaning independent of the other entities  The associative entity should have at least one or more attributes other than the identifier  The associative entity may participate in other relationships other than the entities of the associated relationship  Ternary relationships should be converted to associative entities

37 Figure 3-11b – An associative entity (CERTIFICATE)

38 Relationship degrees specify number of entity types involved( COINVOLTO ) Entity symbols A special entity that is also a relationship Relationship symbols Relationship cardinalities specify how many of each entity type is allowed Attribute symbols

39 Sample E-R Diagram (Figure 3-1) Supplier_ID Supplier_Name Supplier_Address Attribute