Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–1 Schedule Nov. 27 (T) Semistructured Data, XML. u Read Sections 4.6-4.7. Assignment 8 due. Nov. 29 (TH) The Real World,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
XML Document Type Definitions ( DTD ). 1.Introduction to DTD An XML document may have an optional DTD, which defines the document’s grammar. Since the.
Advertisements

CMPT 354, Simon Fraser University, Fall 2008, Martin Ester 311 Database Systems I The Semistructured Data Model.
2/6/05Salman Azhar: Database Systems1 XML Salman Azhar Semi-structured Data XML (Extensible Markup Language) Well-formed and Valid XML Document Type Definitions.
CS 898N – Advanced World Wide Web Technologies Lecture 21: XML Chin-Chih Chang
CSE 636 Data Integration XML Semistructured Data Document Type Definitions.
1 Lecture 10 XML Wednesday, October 18, XML Outline XML (4.6, 4.7) –Syntax –Semistructured data –DTDs.
Introduction to XLink Transparency No. 1 XML Information Set W3C Recommendation 24 October 2001 (1stEdition) 4 February 2004 (2ndEdition) Cheng-Chia Chen.
1 COS 425: Database and Information Management Systems XML and information exchange.
Winter 2002Arthur Keller – CS 18018–1 Schedule Today: Mar. 12 (T) u Semistructured Data, XML, XQuery. u Read Sections Assignment 8 due. Mar. 14.
Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18014–1 Schedule Nov. 13 (T) Object-Relational, O-R Queries. u Read Sections 4.5, Assignment 6 due. (No office hours.)
1 XML Document Type Definitions XML Schema. 2 Well-Formed and Valid XML uWell-Formed XML allows you to invent your own tags. uValid XML conforms to a.
Semi-structured Data. Facts about the Web Growing fast Popular Semi-structured data –Data is presented for ‘human’-processing –Data is often ‘self-describing’
1 XML Semistructured Data Extensible Markup Language Document Type Definitions.
1 Advanced Topics XML and Databases. 2 XML u Overview u Structure of XML Data –XML Document Type Definition DTD –Namespaces –XML Schema u Query and Transformation.
1 XML Semistructured Data Extensible Markup Language Document Type Definitions.
4/20/2017.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 2-1 Created by Cheryl M. Hughes, Harvard University Extension School — Cambridge, MA The Web Wizard’s Guide.
XP New Perspectives on XML Tutorial 3 1 DTD Tutorial – Carey ISBN
VICTORIA UNIVERSITY OF WELLINGTON Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui SWEN 432 Advanced Database Design and Implementation Document Type Definition.
Database Management Systems 3ed, R. Ramakrishnan and J. Gehrke1 XML Taken from Chapter 7.
Why XML ? Problems with HTML HTML design - HTML is intended for presentation of information as Web pages. - HTML contains a fixed set of markup tags. This.
Lecture 6 of Advanced Databases XML Schema, Querying & Transformation Instructor: Mr.Ahmed Al Astal.
Maziar Sanaii Ashtiani – SCT – EMU, Fall 2011/12.
XML CPSC 315 – Programming Studio Fall 2008 Project 3, Lecture 1.
TDDD43 XML and RDF Slides based on slides by Lena Strömbäck and Fang Wei-Kleiner 1.
XML Overview. Chapter 8 © 2011 Pearson Education 2 Extensible Markup Language (XML) A text-based markup language (like HTML) A text-based markup language.
XML – 1h. XML: Contents What is XML? What is “Well Formed” XML? What is “Valid” XML? –Document Type Definitions –Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) XML in.
CSCE 520- Relational Data Model Lecture 2. Relational Data Model The following slides are reused by the permission of the author, J. Ullman, from the.
August Chapter 2 - Markup and Core Concepts Learning XML by Erik T. Ray Slides were developed by Jack Davis College of Information Science and Technology.
Document Type Definitions XML Schema
What is XML?  XML stands for EXtensible Markup Language  XML is a markup language much like HTML  XML was designed to carry data, not to display data.
Company LOGO OODB and XML Database Management Systems – Fall 2012 Matthew Moccaro.
Chapter 27 The World Wide Web and XML. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.27-2 Topics in this Chapter The Web and the Internet.
Processing of structured documents Spring 2002, Part 2 Helena Ahonen-Myka.
Lecture 22 XML querying. 2 Example 31.5 – XQuery FLWOR Expressions ‘=’ operator is a general comparison operator. XQuery also defines value comparison.
1 Tutorial 13 Validating Documents with DTDs Working with Document Type Definitions.
Avoid using attributes? Some of the problems using attributes: Attributes cannot contain multiple values (child elements can) Attributes are not easily.
Winter 2006Keller, Ullman, Cushing18–1 Plan 1.Information integration: important new application that motivates what follows. 2.Semistructured data: a.
XML A web enabled data description language 4/22/2001 By Mark Lawson & Edward Ryan L’Herault.
1 Chapter 10: XML What is XML What is XML Basic Components of XML Basic Components of XML XPath XPath XQuery XQuery.
JSTL, XML and XSLT An introduction to JSP Standard Tag Library and XML/XSLT transformation for Web layout.
Copyrighted material John Tullis 10/17/2015 page 1 04/15/00 XML Part 3 John Tullis DePaul Instructor
CIS 451: XML DTDs Dr. Ralph D. Westfall February, 2009.
1 CS1368 Introduction* Relational Model, Schemas, SQL Semistructured Model, XML * The slides in this lecture are adapted from slides used in Standford's.
Copyright © 2007 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant B. Navathe Chapter 27 XML: Extensible Markup Language.
XML Instructor: Charles Moen CSCI/CINF XML  Extensible Markup Language  A set of rules that allow you to create your own markup language  Designed.
17 Apr 2002 XML Syntax: Documents Andy Clark. Basic Document Structure Element tags – Elements have associated attributes Text content Miscellaneous –
Lecture 16 Introduction to XML Boriana Koleva Room: C54
1 Introduction to XML XML stands for Extensible Markup Language. Because it is extensible, XML has been used to create a wide variety of different markup.
Chapter 27 The World Wide Web and XML. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.27-2 Topics in this Chapter The Web and the Internet.
Jeff Ullman: Introduction to XML 1 XML Semistructured Data Extensible Markup Language Document Type Definitions.
Semistructured Data Extensible Markup Language Document Type Definitions Zaki Malik November 04, 2008.
The Semistructured-Data Model Programming Languages for XML Spring 2011 Instructor: Hassan Khosravi.
Exam II Syllabus uStorage & Buffer Management uIndexing: Btrees & Hash uMulti-dimensional Indexing uQuery processing (relational ops) uQuery optimization.
Semistructured-Data Model. Lu Chaojun, SJTU 2 Semistructured Data Structured data has a separate schema to describe its structure. –Advantage: efficient.
Internet & World Wide Web How to Program, 5/e. © by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.2.
CSCE 520- Relational Data Model Lecture 2. Oracle login Login from the linux lab or ssh to one of the linux servers using your cse username and password.
Introduction to DTD A Document Type Definition (DTD) defines the legal building blocks of an XML document. It defines the document structure with a list.
Working with XML. Markup Languages Text-based languages based on SGML Text-based languages based on SGML SGML = Standard Generalized Markup Language SGML.
Lecture 23 XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model. 2 Example 31.7 – User-Defined Function Function to return staff at a given branch. DEFINE FUNCTION staffAtBranch($bNo)
Jackson, Web Technologies: A Computer Science Perspective, © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 7 Representing Web Data:
SEMI-STRUCTURED DATA (XML) 1. SEMI-STRUCTURED DATA ER, Relational, ODL data models are all based on schema Structure of data is rigid and known is advance.
Digital Multimedia, 2nd edition Nigel Chapman & Jenny Chapman Chapter 14 This presentation © 2004, MacAvon Media Productions XML.
XML Notes taken from w3schools. What is XML? XML stands for EXtensible Markup Language. XML was designed to store and transport data. XML was designed.
1 Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL) Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)
XML: Extensible Markup Language
Yaşar Tonta & Orçun Madran [yasartonta, Hacettepe University
Semistructured-Data Model
XML Data DTDs, IDs & IDREFs.
CE223 Database Systems Introduction
Presentation transcript:

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–1 Schedule Nov. 27 (T) Semistructured Data, XML. u Read Sections Assignment 8 due. Nov. 29 (TH) The Real World, Review. u Project Part 7 due on Friday, November 30. Dec. 3 (M) Final, 8–11AM.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–2 Plan 1. Information integration: important new application that motivates what follows. 2. Semistructured data: a new data model designed to cope with problems of information integration. 3. XML: a new Web standard that is essentially semistructured data. 4. XQUERY: an emerging standard query language for XML data.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–3 Information Integration Problem: related data exists in many places. They talk about the same things, but differ in model, schema, conventions (e.g., terminology). Example In the real world, every bar has its own database. Some may have relations like beer-price; others have an Microsoft Word file from which the menu is printed. Some keep phones of manufacturers but not addresses. Some distinguish beers and ales; others do not.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–4 Two approaches 1. Warehousing: Make copies of information at each data source centrally. u Reconstruct data daily/weekly/monthly, but do not try to keep it up-to-date. 2. Mediation: Create a view of all information, but do not make copies. u Answer queries by sending appropriate queries to sources.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–5 Warehousing

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–6 Mediation

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–7 Semistructured Data A different kind of data model, more suited to information-integration applications than either relational or OO. u Think of “objects,” but with the type of an object its own business rather than the business of the class to which it belongs. u Allows information from several sources, with related but different properties, to be fit together in one whole. Major application: XML documents.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–8 Graph Representation of Semistructured Data Nodes = objects. Nodes connected in a general rooted graph structure. Labels on arcs. Atomic values on leaf nodes. Big deal: no restriction on labels (roughly = attributes). u Zero, one, or many children of a given label type are all OK.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–9 Example

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–10 XML (Extensible Markup Language) HTML uses tags for formatting (e.g., “italic”). XML uses tags for semantics (e.g., “this is an address”). Two modes: 1. Well-formed XML allows you to invent your own tags, much like labels in semistructured data. 2. Valid XML involves a DTD (Document Type Definition) that tells the labels and gives a grammar for how they may be nested.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–11 Well-Formed XML 1. Declaration =.  Normal declaration is u “Standalone” means that there is no DTD specified. 2. Root tag surrounds the entire balance of the document.  is balanced by, as in HTML. 3. Any balanced structure of tags OK.  Option of tags that don’t require balance, like in HTML.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–12 Example Joe's Bar Bud 2.50 Miller

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–13 Document Type Definitions (DTD) Essentially a grammar describing the legal nesting of tags. Intention is that DTD’s will be standards for a domain, used by everyone preparing or using data in that domain. u Example: a DTD for describing protein structure; a DTD for describing bar menus, etc. Gross Structure of a DTD <!DOCTYPE root tag [ more elements ]>

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–14 Elements of a DTD An element is a name (its tag) and a parenthesized description of tags within an element. Special case: (#PCDATA) after an element name means it is text. Example <!DOCTYPE Bars [ ]>

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–15 Components Each element name is a tag. Its components are the tags that appear nested within, in the order specified. Multiplicity of a tag is controlled by: a) * = zero or more of. b) + = one or more of. c) ? = zero or one of. In addition, | = “or.”

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–16 Using a DTD 1. Set STANDALONE = "no". 2. Either a) Include the DTD as a preamble, or b) Follow the XML tag by a DOCTYPE declaration with the root tag, the keyword SYSTEM, and a file where the DTD can be found.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–17 Example of (a) <!DOCTYPE Bars [ ]> Joe's Bar Bud 2.50 Miller

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–18 Example of (b) Suppose our bars DTD is in file bar.dtd : Joe's Bar Bud 2.50 Miller

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–19 Attribute Lists Opening tags can have “arguments” that appear within the tag, in analogy to constructs like in HTML. Keyword !ATTLIST introduces a list of attributes and their types for a given element. Example <!ATTLIST BAR type = "sushi"|"sports"|"other" > Bar objects can have a type, and the value of that type is limited to the three strings shown. Example of use:...

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–20 ID’s and IDREF’s These are pointers from one object to another, analogous to NAME = foo and HREF = #foo in HTML. Allows the structure of an XML document to be a general graph, rather than just a tree. An attribute of type ID can be used to give the object (string between opening and closing tags) a unique string identifier. An attribute of type IDREF refers to some object by its identifier.  Also IDREFS to allow multiple object references within one tag.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–21 Example Let us include in our Bars document type elements that are the manufacturers of beers, and have each beer object link, with an IDREF, to the proper manufacturer object. <!DOCTYPE Bars [ ]>

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–22 XQUERY Emerging standard for querying XML documents. Basic form: FOR WHERE RETURN ; Sets of elements described by paths, consisting of: 1. URL, if necessary. 2. Element names forming a path in the semistructured data graph, e.g., //BAR/NAME = “start at any BAR node and go to a NAME child.” 3. Ending condition of the form [ ]

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–23 Example The file : Joe's Bar Bud 2.50 Miller 3.00 Masa's Sapporo

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–24 XQUERY Query Find the prices charged for Bud by sports bars that serve Miller. FOR $b IN document(" = "sports"] WHERE $b/BEER/[NAME = "Miller"] RETURN $b/BAR/NAME, $b/PRICE;

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–25 Project Issues and Scheduling

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–26 Course Evaluations 1. Information: Fill in the Instructor’s name (Keller), Your major, Your year, Course name (Database Systems), Course Number (CMPS180), Call number (92582) 2. Ratings: Most of the criteria for this course, instructor, and TA will be rated using the following scheme: Excellent, Very Good, Average, Below Average, Poor. 3. Comments: Students are requested to justify less than average ratings. Write any general or specific comments for the TA (Steed), instructor or course on the back side of each appropriate page. 4. Return: Please return these pages during this class period to the student designated to collect these evaluations, or return them at your earliest convenience to BE 237.

Fall 2001Arthur Keller – CS 18017–27 Department specific questions 1. Pace of course: 1 (too fast) to 5 (too slow). 2. Hours spent on course per week outside of class: 1 (0–5); 2 (6–9), 3 (10–13); 4 (14–17); 5 (18 or more) Instructor’s questions 3. I think the instructor should remain at UCSC and teach this and other courses in the future. Don’t teach it next quarter … Definitely keep him 4. I’d recommend this course to others if they have lots of time and the kinks are worked out in the course. What are you, crazy? … This could be a great and useful course. 5. I expect this course will be useful to me in the future (job, research, or whatever). Will never use it. … Most useful course I’ve taken.