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Table Design

Table Design. Design Guidelines Normalisation. Informal Design Guidelines. Table Semantics A table should hold information about one and only one entity/concept from the real world Don’t mix information about more things in one table Avoid Redundant Information Waste of storage

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Table Design

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  1. Table Design Design Guidelines Normalisation

  2. Informal Design Guidelines • Table Semantics • A table should hold information about one and only one entity/concept from the real world • Don’t mix information about more things in one table • Avoid Redundant Information • Waste of storage • Update Anomalies • Minimise NULL-values • Storage requirements • Multiple interpretations (ambiguity) • Disallowing the generation of spurious tuples when joining tables.

  3. Semantics • Consider this table part of a system to handle loans from a library: Loan: [title, matNo, lno, lname, laddress, date, status] • Information about different things in the same table

  4. Minimise NULL-values 1 1 Employee Car If NULL is the most common value for an attribute, then that attribute may not belong in the table. One out of ten employees has a company car. One out of ten cars are assigned to certain employee. On which side should the foreign key be included?

  5. Spurious Tuples • Again consider this table part of system to handle loans from a library: Loaner: [lNo, fname, lname,…….] Copy: [matNo,…, lname, …] • The relationship between Loaner and Copy is designed by including the loaner’s last name in Copy • When Loaner and Copy are joined over lname spurious tuples probably will be generated since lname hardly is unique. • For instance ’117 Joe Smith’ will be associated with all copies borrowed by someone with last name ‘Smith’, and all other Smiths will be associated with copies borrowed by Joe. • The problem arises when relations are represented by anything else than primary – foreign keys

  6. Normalisation • Normal forms are the formal way to state design guidelines. • Normalisation is the process. • 6 normal forms (NF) are defined: • 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and Boyce-Codd (BCNF). • 4th and 5th NF • BCNF is the one of most practical interest.

  7. First Normal Form (1NF) • A table is on 1NF if • All attributes are atomic • 1NF has become part of the definition of a relation in the relational model and is achieved trivially.

  8. Functional Dependenciesthe foundation of 2NF, 3NF and BCNF Y is functional dependent (FD) of X, if there for any given value of X always is the same value for Y (X and Y being any set of attributes). FD is written X -> Y Y is FD of X or X is determinant for Y If X is a candidate key, then X -> Y for all sets of attributes Y. X -> Y implies nothing about Y -> X. Classic example: in an address city is FD of postalCode (or postalCode determines city).

  9. A Side • Often in literature functional dependencies and normal forms are described using a lot of math and it may seem quite theoretical and complicated BUT FDs are business rules and normal forms are common sense constraints on table design • The theory and the math are very useful building tools

  10. Second Normal Form (2NF) • Is about partial FDs • A FD X->Y is a full functional dependency (FFD), if no attribute can be removed from X without also removing the FD X->Y. • A FD that is not FFD is called partial. • A table is on 2NF if: • It is on 1NF • All non-key attributes are FFD of all candidate keys. Example: Loan: [title, matNo, lno, lname, laddress, date, status]

  11. Third Normal Form (3NF) • Is about transitive FDs • A FD (X->Y) is transitive, if there exists a set of attributes Z satisfying X -> Z and Z -> Y. • A table is on 3NF if: • It is on 2NF • No non-key attribute is transitively dependent of a candidate key. • ”postalCode - city”-problem!

  12. Transitive FD Ssn Dmgr_ssn since Ssn Dnumberand Dnumber  Dmgr_ssn Dnumber is not a key or part of a candidate key for EMP_DEPT

  13. Boyce-Codd Normal Form If a table is on BCNF, then it is also on 1., 2. and 3. NF. A table is on BCNF, if all determinants are candidate keys. That is: only candidate key may determine the value of other attributes

  14. overlap The Difference between 3NF and BCNF • For a table to be on 3NF and not on BCNF it must satisfy: • It has more than one candidate key, and • The candidate keys are overlapping, that is: they have common attributes. • For example: A: [a, b, c, d] candidate keys: (a, b) and (a, d)

  15. Guideline for Normalisation All attributes are to depend on the key, the whole key, and nothing but the key. So help me Codd.

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