Data Modeling Using The Entity-Relationship (ER) Model
Data Modeling Using The Entity-Relationship (ER) Model
Data Modeling Using The Entity-Relationship (ER) Model
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Overview of Database Design Process
Two main activities:
Database design
Applications design
Focus in this chapter on database design
To design the conceptual schema for a database
application
Applications design focuses on the programs and
interfaces that access the database
Generally considered part of software engineering
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Overview of Database Design Process
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Purpose of E/R Model
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Example COMPANY Database
We need to create a database schema design based on
the following (simplified) requirements of the COMPANY
Database:
Step # 1 : Requirements Collection & Data Analysis
The COMPANY database keeps track of:
employees and their dependents,
departments, and
projects
Database designers formulate a “Mini-world”
Description
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“Mini-world” Description
Concerning the department:
company is organized into departments
a department has a unique name, a unique number,
and a specific employee is its manager
we track the start date for the manager function
a department may be in several locations
a department controls a number of projects
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Entities
Entities are specific objects or things in the mini-
world that are represented in the database.
For example:
The EMPLOYEE John Smith,
The Research DEPARTMENT,
The ProductX PROJECT
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Entity Type & Entity Set
Each Entity Type will have a collection of entities
stored in the database
Called the Entity Set
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Initial Design of Entity Types for the
COMPANY Database Schema
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Entities
employee
project
department
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Attributes
Attributes are properties used to describe an entity.
For example:
an EMPLOYEE entity may have the attributes
Name, SSN, Address, Gender, BirthDate
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Attributes
In ER diagrams, an attribute is displayed in an oval
Number of Employees
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Types of Attributes
Simple
Each entity has a single atomic value for the attribute. For
example: SSN.
Composite
The attribute may be composed of several components. For
example:
Address(Apt#, House#, Street, City, State, ZipCode, Country), or
Name(FirstName, MiddleName, LastName).
Composition may form a hierarchy where some components
are themselves composite.
Multi-valued
An entity may have multiple values for that attribute. For
example, Color of a CAR or PreviousDegrees of a STUDENT.
Denoted as {Color} or {PreviousDegrees}.
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Attributes
Composite
fname minit lname
Number of Employees
Simple
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Complex Attributes
In general, composite and multi-valued attributes
may be nested arbitrarily to any number of levels,
although this is rare.
For example, PreviousDegrees of a STUDENT is
a composite multi-valued attribute denoted by
{PreviousDegrees (College, Year, Degree, Field)}
Multiple PreviousDegrees values can exist
Each has four subcomponent attributes:
College, Year, Degree, Field
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Key Attributes
An attribute of an entity type for which each
entity MUST have a Unique Value is called
a key attribute of the entity type.
For example, SSN of EMPLOYEE.
A key attribute may be composite.
VehicleTagNumber is a key of the CAR entity
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Attributes
Number of Employees
Key
Attribute
(Constraint)
Slide 3- 20
Refining the initial design by introducing
relationships
The initial design is typically not complete
Some aspects in the requirements will be
represented as relationships
ER model has three main concepts:
Entities (and their entity types and entity sets)
Attributes (simple, composite, multivalued)
Relationships (and their relationship types and
relationship sets)
We introduce relationship concepts next
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Relationships and Relationship Types
A relationship relates two or more distinct entities with a
specific meaning. For example:
EMPLOYEE John Smith works on ProductX PROJECT,
EMPLOYEE Franklin Wong manages Research
DEPARTMENT.
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Relationships
employee
project
In ER diagrams, we represent the relationship type
as: Diamond-shaped box connected to the participating
entity types via straight lines
dependent
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Relationship instances of the WORKS_FOR N:1
relationship between EMPLOYEE and DEPARTMENT
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Relationship instances of the M:N WORKS_ON
relationship between EMPLOYEE and PROJECT
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Relationship type vs. relationship set
Relationship Type:
Is the schema description of a relationship
Identifies the relationship name and the
participating entity types
Also identifies certain relationship constraints
Relationship Set:
The current set of relationship instances
represented in the database
The current state of a relationship type
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Degree of a relationship type
The degree of a relationship type is the number
of participating entity types.
Both MANAGES and WORKS_ON are binary
relationships.
The “works_for” relationship is of degree two
binary
A relationship in which for example a supplier
supplies parts to a project is of degree three
ternary
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Refining the COMPANY database
schema by introducing relationships
By examining the requirements, six relationship types are
identified
All are binary relationships
Listed below with their participating entity types:
WORKS_FOR (between EMPLOYEE, DEPARTMENT)
MANAGES (also between EMPLOYEE, DEPARTMENT)
CONTROLS (between DEPARTMENT, PROJECT)
WORKS_ON (between EMPLOYEE, PROJECT)
SUPERVISION (between EMPLOYEE (as subordinate),
EMPLOYEE (as supervisor))
DEPENDENTS_OF (between EMPLOYEE, DEPENDENT)
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Relationships
dependent
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Discussion on Relationship Types
In the refined design, some attributes from the initial entity
types are refined into relationships:
Manager of DEPARTMENT -> MANAGES
Works_on of EMPLOYEE -> WORKS_ON
Department of EMPLOYEE -> WORKS_FOR
etc
In general, more than one relationship type can exist
between the same participating entity types
MANAGES and WORKS_FOR are distinct relationship
types between EMPLOYEE and DEPARTMENT
Different meanings and different relationship instances.
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Initial Design of Entity Types:
EMPLOYEE, DEPARTMENT, PROJECT, DEPENDENT
These
attributes will
turn into
relationships
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Recursive Relationship Type
An relationship type with the same participating entity type
acting in distinct roles
Example: the SUPERVISION relationship
EMPLOYEE participates twice in two distinct roles:
supervisor (or boss) role
supervisee (or subordinate) role
Each relationship instance relates two distinct
EMPLOYEE entities:
One employee in supervisor role
One employee in supervisee role
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Role Names & Recursive Relationships
employee
supervisee supervisor
supervision
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Constraints on Relationships
Cardinality Ratio (specifies maximum participation)
One-to-one (1:1)
One-to-many (1:N) or Many-to-one (N:1)
Many-to-many (M:N)
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Constraints Cardinality Ratio
1
N works for department
1
1
employee manages 1 controls
supervisee N
supervisor
N
N 1 M
supervision 1 works on project
dependents of
dependent
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Constraints Participation
1
N works for department
1
1
employee manages 1 controls
supervisee N
supervisor
N
N 1 M
supervision 1 works on project
dependents of
partial
dependent
constraint
total constraint
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Attributes of Relationship types
A relationship type can have attributes:
For example, HoursPerWeek of WORKS_ON
Its value for each relationship instance describes
the number of hours per week that an EMPLOYEE
works on a PROJECT.
A value of HoursPerWeek depends on a particular
(employee, project) combination
Most relationship attributes are used with M:N
relationships
In 1:N relationships, they can be transferred to the
entity type on the N-side of the relationship
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Attributes of Relationships
1
N works for department
startdate 1
1
employee manages 1 controls
supervisee hours N
supervisor
N
N 1 M
supervision 1 works on project
dependents of
partial
dependent
constraint
total constraint
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Weak Entity Types
Strong entity
key attribute
entity has a key attribute or a combination of attributes
which can be used as a key.
Weak entity
No key attributes, may have a partial key
related to specific entities from another entity type in
combination with some of their attribute values.
the identifying relationship will have total participation for the
weak entity
identifying owner
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name number
location
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Composite Final ER-Diagram
Participation Cardinality
Constraints Constraints
name number
location
Derived
degree
supervisor N hours N
supervisee M
1
supervision works on project
Multi-Valued
Key Attribute
Weak Entity dependent (Constraint)
Slide 3- 42
The (min,max) notation for
relationship constraints
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COMPANY ER Schema Diagram using (min,
max) notation
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Summary of notation for ER diagrams
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Alternative diagrammatic notation
ER diagrams is one popular example for
displaying database schemas
Many other notations exist in the literature and in
various database design and modeling tools
Appendix A illustrates some of the alternative
notations that have been used
UML class diagrams is representative of another
way of displaying ER concepts that is used in
several commercial design tools
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UML class diagrams
Represent classes (similar to entity types) as large boxes
with three sections:
Top section includes entity type (class) name
Second section includes attributes
Third section includes class operations (operations are not
in basic ER model)
Relationships (called associations) represented as lines
connecting the classes
Other UML terminology also differs from ER terminology
Used in database design and object-oriented software
design
UML has many other types of diagrams for software
design (see Chapter 12)
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UML class diagram for COMPANY
database schema
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Other alternative diagrammatic notations
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Data Modeling Tools
A number of popular tools that cover conceptual modeling
and mapping into relational schema design.
Examples: ERWin, S- Designer (Enterprise Application
Suite), ER- Studio, etc.
POSITIVES:
Serves as documentation of application requirements, easy
user interface - mostly graphics editor support
NEGATIVES:
Most tools lack a proper distinct notation for relationships
with relationship attributes
Mostly represent a relational design in a diagrammatic form
rather than a conceptual ER-based design
Slide 3- 50
Some of the Currently Available
Automated Database Design Tools
COMPANY TOOL FUNCTIONALITY
Embarcadero ER Studio Database Modeling in ER and IDEF1X
Technologies
DB Artisan Database administration, space and security management
Rational (IBM) Rational Rose UML Modeling & application generation in C++/JAVA
Resolution Ltd. Xcase Conceptual modeling up to code maintenance
Sybase Enterprise Application Suite Data modeling, business logic modeling
Visio Visio Enterprise Data modeling, design/reengineering Visual Basic/C++
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Chapter Summary
ER Model Concepts: Entities, attributes,
relationships
Constraints in the ER model
Using ER in step-by-step conceptual schema
design for the COMPANY database
ER Diagrams - Notation
Alternative Notations – UML class diagrams,
others
Data Modeling Tools
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