27F157AL5 Enhanced ER-Diagram
27F157AL5 Enhanced ER-Diagram
Example: A library database contains a listing of authors that have written books on various subjects (one author per book). It also contains information about libraries that carry books on various subjects.
RELATIONSHIPS (Cont)
Example: A library database contains a listing of authors that have written books on various subjects (one author per book). It also contains information about libraries that carry books on various subjects.
Entity sets: authors, subjects, books, libraries
RELATIONSHIPS (Cont)
Example: A library database contains a listing of authors that have written books on various subjects (one author per book). It also contains information about libraries that carry books on various subjects.
Entity sets: authors, subjects, books, libraries Relationship sets: wrote, carry, indexed
RELATIONSHIPS (Cont)
isbn index
RELATIONSHIPS (Cont)
title SS# authors name quantity address carry libraries wrote books
isbn index
keys A key is a combination of one or more attributes, e.g., social-security number, combination of name and socialsecurity number. A superkey is a key defined either for an entity set or relationship set that uniquely identifies an entity, e.g., social-security number, phone number, combination of name and social-security number. A candidate key is a minimal superkey that uniquely identifies either an entity or a relationship, e.g., socialsecurity number, phone number. A primary key is a candidate key that is chosen by the database designer to identify the entities of an entity set.
A foreign key is a set of one or more attributes of a strong entity set that are employed to construct the discriminator of a weak entity set. The primary key of a weak entity set is formed by the primary key of the strong entity set on which it is existence-dependent.
SS# name authors wrote title books edition
Relationship sets also have primary keys. Assume R is a relationship set involving entity sets E1, E2, ..., En. Let primary-key(Ei) denote the primary key for entity set Ei. Assume primary-key(Ei) is unique for 1 i n. If R has no attributes then its superkey is: primary-key(E1) primary-key(E2) ... primary-key(En) This is a primary key if the mapping constraint is many-tomany. R E1 E2 If the mapping constraint is many to one from E1 to E2 then the primary key of R is primary key of E1.
EXAMPLE
Employees of a large company, e.g., IBM, where an employee reports to a manager. The manager is also an employee who reports to another manager. This chain of command continues to the very top where the CEO is the only employee who is not reporting to a manager. Draw the ER diagram for this example.
SS#
Emp
name address
Works for
Works for
A relationship may involve n entities, N-ary relationship It is always possible to replace a non-binary relationship set by a number of distinct binary relationship sets
People fans Football Teams
on
Date
Aggregation
Consider the ternary relationship works-on, which we saw earlier Suppose we want to record managers for tasks performed by an
employee at a branch
Example: A library database contains a listing of authors that have written books on various subjects (one author per book). It also contains information about libraries that carry books on various subjects.
Entity sets: authors, subjects, books, libraries Relationship sets: wrote, carry, indexed E-R diagram:
Basic concepts of ER modeling are not sufficient to represent requirements of newer, more complex applications.
Response is development of additional semantic modeling concepts.
Specialization
Is the process of defining a set of subclasses of a superclass The set of subclasses is based upon some distinguishing characteristics of the entities in the superclass Example: {SECRETARY, ENGINEER, TECHNICIAN} is a specialization of EMPLOYEE based upon job type. May have several specializations of the same superclass Example: Another specialization of EMPLOYEE based in method of pay is {SALARIED_EMPLOYEE, HOURLY_EMPLOYEE}. Superclass/subclass relationships and specialization can be diagrammatically represented in EER diagrams Attributes of a subclass are called specific attributes. For example, TypingSpeed of SECRETARY The subclass can participate in specific relationship types. For example, BELONGS_TO of HOURLY_EMPLOYEE
Example of a Specialization
Generalization
The reverse of the specialization process Several classes with common features are generalized into a superclass; original classes become its subclasses Example: CAR, TRUCK generalized into VEHICLE; both CAR, TRUCK become subclasses of the superclass VEHICLE.
We can view {CAR, TRUCK} as a specialization of VEHICLE Alternatively, we can view VEHICLE as a generalization of CAR and TRUCK
Generalization
A bottom-up design process combine a number of entity sets that share the same features into a higher-level entity set. Specialization and generalization are simple inversions of each other; they are represented in an E-R diagram in the same way. The terms specialization and generalization are used interchangeably.
Completeness Constraint:
Total specifies that every entity in the superclass must be a member of some subclass in the specialization/ generalization Shown in EER diagrams by a double line Partial allows an entity not to belong to any of the subclasses Shown in EER diagrams by a single line
Note: Generalization usually is total because the superclass is derived from the subclasses.
In a lattice or hierarchy, a subclass inherits attributes not only of its direct superclass, but also of all its predecessor superclasses A subclass with more than one superclass is called a shared subclass Can have specialization hierarchies or lattices, or generalization hierarchies or lattices In specialization, start with an entity type and then define subclasses of the entity type by successive specialization (top down conceptual refinement process) In generalization, start with many entity types and generalize those that have common properties (bottom up conceptual synthesis process) In practice, the combination of two processes is employed
Example: Database for vehicle registration, vehicle owner can be a person, a bank (holding a lien on a vehicle) or a company. Category (subclass) OWNER is a subset of the union of the three superclasses COMPANY, BANK, and PERSON A category member must exist in at least one of its superclasses Note: The difference from shared subclass, which is subset of the intersection of its superclasses (shared subclass member must exist in all of its superclasses).
Specialization
This is the process of maximising the differences between members of an entity by identifying their distinguishing characteristics.
Staff(staff_no,name,address,dob) Manager(bonus) Secretary(wp_skills) Sales_personnel(sales_area, car_allowance)
student is A
sid
name
Generalization
Specialization
Undergrad
graduate
student
sid
name
Generalization
Specialization
Undergrad
graduate
A design may require all members of an entity-set to be specialized. For example, an employee MUST be a member of either a Salaried or Part-time. Use double lines to dictate this constraint
Emp
sid
name
Generalization
Specialization
Salaried
Part-time
sid
name Generalization
Specialization
Salaried
Part-time
Generalisation
Generalisation is the process of minimising the differences between entities byidentifying common features.
This is the identification of a generalised superclass from the original subclasses. This is the process of identifying the common attributes and relationships.
Displaying attributes