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Module-1 Chapter 03

This document outlines the concepts of data modeling using the Entity-Relationship (ER) model, focusing on the database design process. It provides an example of a COMPANY database, detailing entities such as DEPARTMENT, PROJECT, EMPLOYEE, and DEPENDENT, along with their attributes and relationships. The document also discusses ER diagram notation and the importance of relationships in refining the database schema.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views44 pages

Module-1 Chapter 03

This document outlines the concepts of data modeling using the Entity-Relationship (ER) model, focusing on the database design process. It provides an example of a COMPANY database, detailing entities such as DEPARTMENT, PROJECT, EMPLOYEE, and DEPENDENT, along with their attributes and relationships. The document also discusses ER diagram notation and the importance of relationships in refining the database schema.

Uploaded by

m
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Course Name: Database Management System

Course Code: 18CS53


V Semester
2018 Scheme

Module 1- Chapter 3
Data Modeling Using the Entity-
Relationship (ER) Model
Chapter Outline
 Overview of Database Design Process
 Example Database Application (COMPANY)
 ER Model Concepts
 Entities and Attributes
 Entity Types, Value Sets, and Key Attributes
 Relationships and Relationship Types
 Weak Entity Types
 Roles and Attributes in Relationship Types
 ER Diagrams - Notation
 ER Diagram for COMPANY Schema
 Alternative Notations – UML class diagrams, others

Slide 3- 3
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

Slide 3- 4
Overview of Database Design Process

Slide 3- 5
Example COMPANY Database
 We need to create a database schema design
based on the following (simplified) requirements
of the COMPANY Database:
 The company is organized into DEPARTMENTs.
Each department has a name, number and an
employee who manages the department. We keep
track of the start date of the department manager.
A department may have several locations.
 Each department controls a number of
PROJECTs. Each project has a unique name,
unique number and is located at a single location.

Slide 3- 6
Example COMPANY Database
(Contd.)
 We store each EMPLOYEE’s social security
number, address, salary, sex, and birthdate.

Each employee works for one department but may
work on several projects.

We keep track of the number of hours per week that
an employee currently works on each project.

We also keep track of the direct supervisor of each
employee.
 Each employee may have a number of
DEPENDENTs.

For each dependent, we keep track of their name,
sex, birthdate, and relationship to the employee.

Slide 3- 7
ER Model Concepts
 Entities and Attributes

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

Attributes are properties used to describe an entity.

For example an EMPLOYEE entity may have the attributes
Name, SSN, Address, Sex, BirthDate

A specific entity will have a value for each of its attributes.

For example a specific employee entity may have
Name='John Smith', SSN='123456789', Address ='731,
Fondren, Houston, TX', Sex='M', BirthDate='09-JAN-55‘

Each attribute has a value set (or data type) associated with
it – e.g. integer, string, subrange, enumerated type, …

Slide 3- 8
Types of Attributes (1)
 Simple

Each entity has a single atomic value for the attribute. For
example, SSN or Sex.
 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}.

Slide 3- 9
Types of Attributes (2)
 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

Slide 3- 10
Example of a composite attribute

Slide 3- 11
Entity Types and Key Attributes (1)
 Entities with the same basic attributes are
grouped or typed into an entity type.
 For example, the entity type EMPLOYEE
and PROJECT.
 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.

Slide 3- 12
Entity Types and Key Attributes (2)
 A key attribute may be composite.
 VehicleTagNumber is a key of the CAR entity

type with components (Number, State).


 An entity type may have more than one key.
 The CAR entity type may have two keys:


VehicleIdentificationNumber (popularly called VIN)

VehicleTagNumber (Number, State), aka license
plate number.
 Each key is underlined

Slide 3- 13
Displaying an Entity type
 In ER diagrams, an entity type is displayed in a
rectangular box
 Attributes are displayed in ovals
 Each attribute is connected to its entity type
 Components of a composite attribute are
connected to the oval representing the composite
attribute
 Each key attribute is underlined
 Multivalued attributes displayed in double ovals
 See CAR example on next slide

Slide 3- 14
Entity Type CAR with two keys and a
corresponding Entity Set

Slide 3- 15
Entity Set
 Each entity type will have a collection of entities
stored in the database
 Called the entity set
 Previous slide shows three CAR entity instances
in the entity set for CAR
 Same name (CAR) used to refer to both the entity
type and the entity set
 Entity set is the current state of the entities of that
type that are stored in the database

Slide 3- 16
Initial Design of Entity Types for
the COMPANY Database Schema
 Based on the requirements, we can identify four
initial entity types in the COMPANY database:
 DEPARTMENT
 PROJECT
 EMPLOYEE
 DEPENDENT
 Their initial design is shown on the following slide
 The initial attributes shown are derived from the
requirements description

Slide 3- 17
Design of Entity Types
Example COMPANY Database
 Req 1: The company is organized into
DEPARTMENTs. Each department has a name,
number and an employee who manages the
department. We keep track of the start date of the
department manager. A department may have
several locations.

Slide 3- 18
Design of Entity Types
Example COMPANY Database
 Req 2: Each department controls a number of
PROJECTs. Each project has a unique name,
unique number and is located at a single location.

Slide 3- 19
Example COMPANY Database
 Req 3: We store each EMPLOYEE’s social security
number, address, salary, sex, and birthdate.

Each employee works for one department but may work on
several projects.

We keep track of the number of hours per week that an
employee currently works on each project.

We also keep track of the direct supervisor of each employee.

Slide 3- 20
Example COMPANY Database
 Each employee may have a number of
DEPENDENTs.

For each dependent, we keep track of their name,
sex, birthdate, and relationship to the employee.

Slide 3- 21
Initial Design of Entity Types:
EMPLOYEE, DEPARTMENT, PROJECT, DEPENDENT

Slide 3- 22
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

Slide 3- 23
Relationships and Relationship Types (1)
 A relationship relates two or more distinct entities with a
specific meaning.

For example, EMPLOYEE John Smith works on the ProductX
PROJECT, or EMPLOYEE Franklin Wong manages the
Research DEPARTMENT.
 Relationships of the same type are grouped or typed into
a relationship type.

For example, the WORKS_ON relationship type in which
EMPLOYEEs and PROJECTs participate, or the MANAGES
relationship type in which EMPLOYEEs and DEPARTMENTs
participate.
 The degree of a relationship type is the number of
participating entity types.

Both MANAGES and WORKS_ON are binary relationships.

Slide 3- 24
Relationship instances of the WORKS_FOR
N:1 relationship between EMPLOYEE and
DEPARTMENT

Slide 3- 25
Relationship instances of the M:N
WORKS_ON relationship between
EMPLOYEE and PROJECT

Slide 3- 26
Refining the COMPANY database
schema by introducing relationships
 By examining the requirements, six relationship types are
identified
 All are binary relationships( degree 2)
 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)

Slide 3- 27
ER DIAGRAM – Relationship Types are:
WORKS_FOR, MANAGES, WORKS_ON, CONTROLS, SUPERVISION, DEPENDENTS_OF

Slide 3- 28
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.
Recursive Relationship Type
 An relationship type whose with the same participating
entity type 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

Slide 3- 30
Weak Entity Types
 An entity that does not have a key attribute
 A weak entity must participate in an identifying
relationship type with an owner or identifying entity type
 Entities are identified by the combination of:
 A partial key of the weak entity type
 The particular entity they are related to in the identifying entity

type
 Example:
 A DEPENDENT entity is identified by the dependent’s first name,

and the specific EMPLOYEE with whom the dependent is related


 Name of DEPENDENT is the partial key

 DEPENDENT is a weak entity type

 EMPLOYEE is its identifying entity type via the identifying

relationship type DEPENDENT_OF

Slide 3- 31
Constraints on Relationships
 Constraints on Relationship Types
 (Also known as ratio constraints)
 The cardinality ratio for a binary relationship specifies the
maximum number of relationship instances that an entity
can participate in.

One-to-one (1:1)

One-to-many (1:N) or Many-to-one (N:1)

Many-to-many (M:N)
 Existence Dependency Constraint (specifies minimum
participation) (also called participation constraint)

zero (optional- partial participation, not existence-dependent)

one or more (mandatory- total participation, existence-
dependent)
Slide 3- 32
Many-to-one (N:1) Relationship

Slide 3- 33
Many-to-many (M:N) Relationship

Slide 3- 34
Recursive Relationship Type is: SUPERVISION
(participation role names are shown)

Slide 3- 35
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

Slide 3- 36
Example Attribute of a Relationship Type:
Hours of WORKS_ON

Slide 3- 37
Notation for Constraints on
Relationships
 Cardinality ratio (of a binary relationship): 1:1,
1:N, N:1, or M:N
 Shown by placing appropriate numbers on the
relationship edges.
 Participation constraint (on each participating
entity type): total (called existence dependency)
or partial.
 Total shown by double line, partial by single line.
 NOTE: These are easy to specify for Binary
Relationship Types.

Slide 3- 38
The (min,max) notation for
relationship constraints

Read the min,max numbers next to the entity type and looking
away from the entity type

Slide 3- 39
COMPANY ER Schema Diagram using (min, max) notation

Slide 3- 40
Summary
of notation
for ER
diagrams

Slide 3- 41
An ER diagram for a UNIVERSITY database schema

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