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1 Normalization, Roberts’s Rules and Introduction to Data Modeling CSCI 6442.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Normalization, Roberts’s Rules and Introduction to Data Modeling CSCI 6442."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Normalization, Roberts’s Rules and Introduction to Data Modeling CSCI 6442

2 2 Agenda Roberts’s Rules Normalization Roberts’s Rules and Normalization

3 3 Why Are We Talking About This? To design a database, we choose a set of entities that models a problem We will store data in tables corresponding to our entity choices The names of the entity types, and what’s in which table, becomes embedded in our programs Changing later on is complex, so we want a stable model of the problem

4 4 Midterm Question The first question on the midterm will deal with normal forms. It will deal with the relationship between normal forms and Roberts’s Rules. This one question will count more than any other question on the exam. The homework assignment for next week looks a lot like Question 1 on the midterm.

5 5 Syntax and Semantics Syntax deals with the structure and form of a statement or language Semantics deals with the meaning that is conveyed by a statement or language

6 6 Question Is normalization a syntactic or a semantic construct? That is, does it deal with the form of information, or is it involved with meaning?

7 7 Intentional vs. Extensional Data Extensional data—the data that is actually present Intentional data—all the data that is allowed to be present Question: does normalization deal with intentional or extensional data?

8 8 Entity and Entity Type An entity is something that we record information about in the database An entity type is a set of similar things that we store information about An entity instance is one example of some entity type. Usually we don’t say entity instance and entity type when context makes the meaning clear; we just say entity.

9 Relations We use a relation to model a single entity type The relation is a set of tuples Each tuple is an ordered collection of values of attributes of the entity type Each tuple of the relation corresponds to a single instance of the entity type 9

10 10 Summary of Terminology Real WorldTheoryDatabase Entity TypeRelationTable Entity InstanceTupleRow AttributeFactColumn

11 11 Facts A value of an attribute in a row conveys one fact about an entity instance An attribute is a fact stating that “This entity instance has the value ” Consider emp(empno,ename,job,deptno) Each value of ename in a row states that “This person’s name is ”. Each row of this table can be viewed as a collection of four facts

12 Example of Facts EMPNOENAMEJOBDEPTNO 10WuPresident1 20LiuVP2 30ChenVP2 12

13 Data Modeling The entire relational database, which is a set of relations, models something in the real world The job of constructing that set of relations is called data modeling. In general, in data modeling we are designing a collection of relations that models a part of the real world All of the formality of normalization is all about how to construct a data model that behaves the way we want it to 13

14 What We’ll Do Now First, we’ll talk about Roberts’s Rules, a collection of rules in plain English about how to design a database. We’ll be careful to fully understand Roberts’s Rules. Then we’ll talk about the basic normal forms: 1NF, 2NF, 3NF, BCNF and 4NF. We’ll take time to understand the normal forms: what does each actually do? Finally, we’ll look at the correspondence of the normal forms with Roberts’s Rules. You will finish this exploration by additional exploration that you will do in your homework. 14

15 15 Roberts’s Rules Roberts’s Rules are a set of plain English rules that, if followed during database design, result in a highly normalized database design. We will explore the relationship of Roberts’s Rules to normalization, and vice versa.

16 16 Roberts’s Rules

17 17 Rule 1 Each relation describes exactly one entity type. A relation models a distinct entity type, and each tuple of the relation models an instance of that entity. The relation models an entity by storing its attributes. The attributes that identify it are called candidate keys; the other attributes are non-key.

18 Do these follow Rule 1? DESK(SER#, HEIGHT, WIDTH, COST, CUSTODIANSALARY) EMP-CAR (EMP#, ENAME, DEPTNO, CARVIN#, CARMAKE, CARYEAR) EMP(EMP#, ENAME, JOB,DEPTNO, DEPTCITY) 18

19 19 Rule 2 Each fact is represented only once in the database. A tuple (aka row) is a collection of facts about an entity instance, one fact per column. Each fact can appear only once, in one row of one table.

20 20 Duplicate Representation? EMPNOENAMEJOBSALDEPTNO 34LiuPres2005 456ChenVP1505 32CoxSales759 DEPTNODNAMELOC 5HQNYC 9SalesDC 20ResearchSF

21 21 Rule 3 Each tuple can reside in only one relation. A relation is a model of an entity type, not a station on a factory assembly line. Instead of moving a tuple from relation to relation, add an attribute that characterizes status.

22 Rule 3 Example As a person is being interviewed and hired, they change status: 1. Resume received 2. Resume being evaluated 3. Selected for interview 4. Selected for hire 5. Hired As status changes, we could more the person’s row from one table to another. Should we? 22

23 23 Rule 4 If the cardinality of an attribute is greater than one, then database design must be insensitive to cardinality. It’s easy—and very risky—to presume that the cardinality of various entity types and subtypes will remain the same.

24 24 Rule 4 Examples Company car College degree Telephone number Home address Business address Email address

25 25 Example of Roberts’s Rules EMP ( EMPNO, ENAME, DEPTNO, DNAME) DEPT (DEPTNO, DNAME, DLOC) This relation violates the following Roberts’s rules : Rule 1. The EMP table describes employee as well as department Rule 2. In the EMP table, if we have the same DEPTNO in multiple rows, DNAME will be represented multiple times.

26 26 Another Example EMP (ENAME, DEGREE1, DEGREE2, DEGREE3) This schema violates the following Roberts’s rule : Rule 4. The design assumes every employee has a maximum of 3 degrees. If an employee has 4 degrees, then the database needs to be restructured by adding DEGREE4 in the EMP table. Rule 4 deals with an aspect of data independence. It can be stated informally as: "Grow down, not across"

27 A Question Are Rule 1 and Rule 2 equivalent? They are equivalent if the set of relations that satisfy Rule 1 is the same as the set of relations that satisfies Rule 2. This is a homework problem. 27

28 28 Normalization Preliminaries

29 29 Normalization A set of formal rules that are intended to be a definition of a properly-structured database A normal form generally deals with and removes certain anomalous behavior from the use of a relation that is normalized.

30 30 Examples of Anomalies Insert anomalies If we want to enter information about a new entity in the database we need to enter information about some other entity first Delete anomalies In order to delete information about an entity we must delete information about another entity Update anomalies In order to change the value of a single fact we may have to change many stored values in the database

31 31 Basic Concepts Entity Type: a class of an object that we record information about. Aka relation, table Attribute: a characteristic of an entity. Aka column. Entity Instance: a single occurrence of an entity type. Aka tuple, row

32 32 Candidate Keys Candidate key: a set of attributes A i, A j,…A k that is a candidate key has two (time- invariant) properties: 1. Uniqueness – no two tuples have the same value for the candidate key 2. 2. Minimality – if any A i is discarded from the candidate key, then the uniqueness property is lost. It is the smallest set of attributes that identifies a row. How many candidate keys can a table have?

33 33 Primary Key One of the candidate keys is selected to be the primary identifier of rows. It is called the primary key. The selection is usually made based on the usefulness of the attribute that is the primary key.

34 34 Functional Dependence R.X→R.Y or R.X FD R.Y Given a relation R, attribute Y of R is functionally dependent on attribute X of R iff each X-value in R has associated with it precisely one Y-value in R (at any one time) In other words, for each value of X in table R, there is one and only one value of Y. A given X value must always occur with the same Y value.

35 35 Functional Dependence Examples XY 1A 2C 3B 1A 2C 4A 3B 6B Does X→Y? Does Y→X?

36 36 Anomalies Update anomalies: If one copy of repeated data is updated, inconsistency is created unless all copies are similarly updated. Insert anomalies: It may not be possible to store some information unless some other information is stored as well. Delete anomalies: It may not be possible to delete some information without losing some other information as well.

37 37 Full Functional Dependence Y is fully functionally dependent on X iff X→Y and no subset of X determines Y. That is, X is the smallest collection of columns that determines Y.

38 “Aboutness” FD is about “aboutness” If A is FD on X, then A is “about” X Suppose X is employee ID, EID; then EID determines salary, SAL But SAL is “about” the employee identified by EID 38

39 39 Normalization

40 40 First Normal Form

41 41 First Normal Form A relation is said to be in first normal form iff every attribute of every tuple is atomic.

42 42 1NF Example EmpnoEnameJobEducDeptno 33JonesPresBS EE, MS EE, PhD Comp Sci 3 324ChuVPBS EE, MBA3 88KumarSalesBS EE, MA Comm4 65YuQuality Contr.BS CS, MS CS, PhD CS5 Question: Is this relation in 1NF? Question: Does this relation show any anomalies?

43 What’s not allowed by 1NF? 1NF doesn’t allow a relation to contain Lists Other relations Multiple values 43

44 44 Second Normal Form

45 45 Second Normal Form A relation is said to be in second normal form iff it is in first normal form and every attribute is fully functionally dependent on the primary key.

46 46 2NF Example SIDSNAMECityStatus 4SmithNYC45 6LiuDC65 7ChenNYC45 9JonesLA22 SID SNAME CityStatus Does this relation follow Roberts’s Rules? Do you see any anomalies?

47 47 2NF and RR What is the relationship between 2NF and Roberts’s Rules? If Rule 1 is met, is the relation in 2NF? What about Rule 2?

48 What does 2NF not permit? 2NF doesn’t allow a relation to have information about more than one entity type 48

49 49 Third Normal Form

50 50 Third Normal Form A relation is said to be in third normal form iff it is in second normal form and there are no transitive dependencies.

51 51 How Do We Convert To 3NF? SIDSNAMECityStatus 4SmithNYC45 6LiuDC65 7ChenNYC45 9JonesLA22 SIDSNAMECity 4SmithNYC 6LiuDC 7ChenNYC 9JonesLA CityStatus DC65 NYC45 LA22 SID SNAME City StatusCity

52 52 3NF and RR If a relation is in 3NF, what about rules 1 and 2?

53 What is not permitted by 3NF? 3NF refines the notion of “aboutness” beyond the restrictions of 2NF 53

54 54 Fourth Normal Form

55 55 Multi-Valued Dependency R.X is said to multi-value determine R.Y if there is a set of values for Y that must appear in any relation where R.X appears. For example, if a course has two textbooks, then there will be an MVD between the course number and the names of the books.

56 56 Fourth Normal Form A relation is said to be in fourth normal form iff it is in third normal form and it does not have more than one multi- valued dependency.

57 57 Example of 4NF Is this relation in 4NF? SIDSportInstrument 87SoccerSaxophone 87TennisViolin 87SoccerViolin 87TennisSaxophone SID Sport Instrument MVD SPORT-INSTRUMENT

58 58 Converting to 4NF SIDSport 87Soccer 87Tennis SIDInstrument 87Saxophone 87Violin SIDSport Instrument MVD SID SPORTINSTRUMENT

59 What does 4NF not permit? 4NF does not permit multiple MVDs in a single relation 59

60 60 Boyce-Codd Normal Form

61 61 Boyce-Codd Normal Form A relation is said to be in Boyce-Codd normal form iff every determinant is a key. BCNF deals with problems that can be caused by overlapping candidate keys.

62 62 Example of BCNF S#SNAMEP#QTY 1Acme65788 2Chen3476 3Jones6534 How does this relation comply with Rule 1 and Rule 2? S# SNAME P# QTY Are there any anomalies?

63 63 Converting to BCNF S#P#QTY 165788 23476 36534 S#SNAME 1Acme 2Chen 3Jones S#SNAME P# QTY S#

64 What does BCNF not allow? BCNF brings the restrictions on “aboutness” to candidate and composite keys 64

65 Roberts’s Rules and Normal Forms 65

66 Rule 1: One Entity Type Per Table Each row must be about a single entity type Can’t have information about two entity types Think of FD. RR1 requires FD, does not allow transitive FD. 66

67 Rule 2: Each Fact Represented Once What must happen for a single fact to be represented more than once? Most likely, there is a transitive dependency So RR2 seems to disallow transitive dependency 67

68 What About 4NF? Lack of 4NF causes duplicate representation of facts. Not permitted by RR2. 68

69 You will have the opportunity for more exploration of this relationship with your homework for next week. 69

70 70 Data Modeling When we design a relational database, we search for a set of entity types that will model the problem of interest If we choose a robust data model, it will last a long time without major changes, even though the programs that use it may change Now that we have some idea what a good data model is, we will talk about how to design one.


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