Relational Algebra and Relational Calculus: Pearson Education © 2009
Relational Algebra and Relational Calculus: Pearson Education © 2009
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Introduction
Relational algebra and relational calculus are formal
languages associated with the relational model.
Informally, relational algebra is a (high-level)
procedural language and relational calculus a non-
procedural language.
However, formally both are equivalent to one
another.
A language that produces a relation that can be
derived using relational calculus is relationally
complete.
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Relational Algebra
Relational algebra operations work on one or
more relations to define another relation without
changing the original relations.
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Relational Algebra
Five basic operations in relational algebra:
Selection, Projection, Cartesian product, Union,
and Set Difference.
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Relational Algebra Operations
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Relational Algebra Operations
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Selection (or Restriction)
predicate (R)
– Works on a single relation R and defines a
relation that contains only those tuples (rows) of
R that satisfy the specified condition (predicate).
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Example - Selection (or Restriction)
List all staff with a salary greater than £10,000.
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Projection
col1, . . . , coln(R)
– Works on a single relation R and defines a
relation that contains a vertical subset of R,
extracting the values of specified attributes and
eliminating duplicates.
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Example - Projection
Produce a list of salaries for all staff, showing only
staffNo, fName, lName, and salary details.
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Union
RS
– Union of two relations R and S defines a relation
that contains all the tuples of R, or S, or both R
and S, duplicate tuples being eliminated.
– R and S must be union-compatible.
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Example - Union
List all cities where there is either a branch office
or a property for rent.
city(Branch) city(PropertyForRent)
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Set Difference
R–S
– Defines a relation consisting of the tuples that
are in relation R, but not in S.
– R and S must be union-compatible.
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Example - Set Difference
List all cities where there is a branch office but no
properties for rent.
city(Branch) – city(PropertyForRent)
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Intersection
RS
– Defines a relation consisting of the set of all
tuples that are in both R and S.
– R and S must be union-compatible.
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Example - Intersection
List all cities where there is both a branch office
and at least one property for rent.
city(Branch) city(PropertyForRent)
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Cartesian product
RXS
– Defines a relation that is the concatenation of
every tuple of relation R with every tuple of
relation S.
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Example - Cartesian product
List the names and comments of all clients who have
viewed a property for rent.
(clientNo, fName, lName(Client)) X (clientNo, propertyNo, comment
(Viewing))
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Example - Cartesian product and Selection
Use selection operation to extract those tuples where
Client.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo.
Client.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo((clientNo, fName, lName(Client)) (clientNo,
propertyNo, comment(Viewing)))
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Join Operations
Various forms of join operation
– Theta join
– Equijoin (a particular type of Theta join)
– Natural join
– Outer join
– Semijoin
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Theta join (-join)
R FS
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Theta join (-join)
Can rewrite Theta join using basic Selection and
Cartesian product operations.
R FS = F(R S)
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Example - Equijoin
List the names and comments of all clients who
have viewed a property for rent.
(clientNo, fName, lName(Client)) Client.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo
(clientNo, propertyNo, comment(Viewing))
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Natural join
R S
– An Equijoin of the two relations R and S over all
common attributes x. One occurrence of each
common attribute is eliminated from the result.
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Example - Natural join
List the names and comments of all clients who
have viewed a property for rent.
(clientNo, fName, lName(Client))
(clientNo, propertyNo, comment(Viewing))
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Outer join
To display rows in the result that do not have
matching values in the join column, use Outer
join.
R S
– (Left) outer join is join in which tuples from
R that do not have matching values in
common columns of S are also included in
result relation.
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Example - Left Outer join
Produce a status report on property viewings.
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Semijoin
R FS
– Defines a relation that contains the tuples of R that
participate in the join of R with S.
R F S = A(R F S)
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Example - Semijoin
List complete details of all staff who work at the
branch in Glasgow.
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Division
RS
– Defines a relation over the attributes C that consists of
set of tuples from R that match combination of every
tuple in S.
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Example - Division
Identify all clients who have viewed all properties
with three rooms.
(clientNo, propertyNo(Viewing))
(propertyNo(rooms = 3 (PropertyForRent)))
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Aggregate Operations
AL(R)
– Applies aggregate function list, AL, to R to
define a relation over the aggregate list.
– AL contains one or more
(<aggregate_function>, <attribute>) pairs .
Main aggregate functions are: COUNT, SUM,
AVG, MIN, and MAX.
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Example – Aggregate Operations
How many properties cost more than £350 per month
to rent?
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Grouping Operation
AL(R)
GA
– Groups tuples of R by grouping attributes, GA,
and then applies aggregate function list, AL, to
define a new relation.
– AL contains one or more
(<aggregate_function>, <attribute>) pairs.
– Resulting relation contains the grouping
attributes, GA, along with results of each of the
aggregate functions.
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Example – Grouping Operation
Find the number of staff working in each branch and
the sum of their salaries.
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Relational Calculus
Relational calculus query specifies what is to be
retrieved rather than how to retrieve it.
– No description of how to evaluate a query.
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Relational Calculus
If predicate contains a variable (e.g. ‘x is a member
of staff’), there must be a range for x.
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Tuple Relational Calculus
Interested in finding tuples for which a predicate is
true. Based on use of tuple variables.
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Tuple Relational Calculus
Can use two quantifiers to tell how many instances
the predicate applies to:
– Existential quantifier (‘there exists’)
– Universal quantifier (‘for all’)
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Tuple Relational Calculus
Existential quantifier used in formulae that
must be true for at least one instance, such as:
Staff(S) (B)(Branch(B)
(B.branchNo = S.branchNo) B.city = ‘London’)
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Tuple Relational Calculus
Universal quantifier is used in statements about
every instance, such as:
B) (B.city ‘Paris’)
Means ‘For all Branch tuples, the address is not in
Paris’.
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Tuple Relational Calculus
Formulae should be unambiguous and make sense.
A (well-formed) formula is made out of atoms:
» R(Si), where Si is a tuple variable and R is a relation
» Si.a1 Sj.a2
» Si.a1 c
Can recursively build up formulae from atoms:
» An atom is a formula
» If F1 and F2 are formulae, so are their conjunction, F1
F2; disjunction, F1 F2; and negation, ~F1
» If F is a formula with free variable X, then (X)(F)
and (X)(F) are also formulae.
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Example - Tuple Relational Calculus
List the names of all managers who earn more than
£25,000.
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Example - Tuple Relational Calculus
List the names of staff who currently do not manage
any properties.
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Example - Tuple Relational Calculus
List the names of clients who have viewed a
property for rent in Glasgow.
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Tuple Relational Calculus
Expressions can generate an infinite set.
For example:
{S | ~Staff(S)}
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Domain Relational Calculus
Uses variables that take values from domains
instead of tuples of relations.
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Example - Domain Relational Calculus
Find the names of all managers who earn more
than £25,000.
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Example - Domain Relational Calculus
List the staff who manage properties for rent
in Glasgow.
{sN, fN, lN, posn, sex, DOB, sal, bN |
(sN1,cty)(Staff(sN,fN,lN,posn,sex,DOB,sal,bN)
PropertyForRent(pN, st, cty, pc, typ, rms,
rnt, oN, sN1, bN1)
(sN=sN1) cty=‘Glasgow’)}
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Example - Domain Relational Calculus
List the names of staff who currently do not
manage any properties for rent.
{fN, lN | (sN)
(Staff(sN,fN,lN,posn,sex,DOB,sal,bN)
(~(sN1) (PropertyForRent(pN, st, cty, pc, typ,
rms, rnt, oN, sN1, bN1) (sN=sN1))))}
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Example - Domain Relational Calculus
List the names of clients who have viewed a
property for rent in Glasgow.
{fN, lN | (cN, cN1, pN, pN1, cty)
(Client(cN, fN, lN,tel, pT, mR)
Viewing(cN1, pN1, dt, cmt)
PropertyForRent(pN, st, cty, pc, typ,
rms, rnt,oN, sN, bN)
(cN = cN1) (pN = pN1) cty = ‘Glasgow’)}
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Domain Relational Calculus
When restricted to safe expressions, domain
relational calculus is equivalent to tuple
relational calculus restricted to safe expressions,
which is equivalent to relational algebra.
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Other Languages
Transform-oriented languages are non-procedural
languages that use relations to transform input
data into required outputs (e.g. SQL).
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Other Languages
4GLs can create complete customized application
using limited set of commands in a user-friendly,
often menu-driven environment.
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