1 / 37

Relational Model & Relational Algebra

Relational Model & Relational Algebra. Relational Model. Terminology of relational model. How tables are used to represent data. Connection between mathematical relations and relations in the relational model. Properties of database relations.

jola
Télécharger la présentation

Relational Model & Relational Algebra

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Relational Model & Relational Algebra

  2. Relational Model • Terminology of relational model. • How tables are used to represent data. • Connection between mathematical relations and relations in the relational model. • Properties of database relations. • How to identify candidate, primary, and foreign keys. • Meaning of entity integrity and referential integrity.

  3. Relational Model Terminology • A relation is a table with columns and rows. • Only applies to logical structure of the database, not the physical structure. • Attribute is a named column of a relation. • Domain is the set of allowable values for one or more attributes.

  4. Relational Model Terminology • Tuple is a row of a relation. • Degree is the number of attributes in a relation. • Cardinality is the number of tuples in a relation. • Relational Database is a collection of normalized relations with distinct relation names.

  5. Instances of Branch and Staff (part) Relations

  6. Examples of Attribute Domains

  7. Alternative Terminology for Relational Model

  8. Database Relations • Relation schema • Named relation defined by a set of attribute and domain name pairs. • Relational database schema • Set of relation schemas, each with a distinct name.

  9. Properties of Relations • Relation name is distinct from all other relation names in relational schema. • Each cell of relation contains exactly one atomic (single) value. • Each attribute has a distinct name. • Values of an attribute are all from the same domain.

  10. Properties of Relations • Each tuple is distinct; there are no duplicate tuples. • Order of attributes has no significance. • Order of tuples has no significance, theoretically.

  11. Relational Keys • Superkey • An attribute, or a set of attributes, that uniquely identifies a tuple within a relation. • Candidate Key • Superkey (K) such that no proper subset is a superkey within the relation. • In each tuple of R, values of K uniquely identify that tuple (uniqueness). • No proper subset of K has the uniqueness property (irreducibility).

  12. Relational Keys • Primary Key • Candidate key selected to identify tuples uniquely within relation. • Alternate Keys • Candidate keys that are not selected to be primary key. • Foreign Key • Attribute, or set of attributes, within one relation that matches candidate key of some (possibly same) relation.

  13. Relational Integrity • Null • Represents value for an attribute that is currently unknown or not applicable for tuple. • Deals with incomplete or exceptional data. • Represents the absence of a value and is not the same as zero or spaces, which are values.

  14. Relational Integrity • Entity Integrity • In a base relation, no attribute of a primary key can be null. • Referential Integrity • If foreign key exists in a relation, either foreign key value must match a candidate key value of some tuple in its home relation or foreign key value must be wholly null. • Enterprise Constraints • Additional rules specified by users or database administrators.

  15. Relational Algebra • Meaning of the term relational completeness. • How to form queries in relational algebra.

  16. Introduction • Relational algebra is a formal language associated with the relational model. • Informally, relational algebra is a (high-level) procedural language

  17. Relational Algebra • Five basic operations in relational algebra: Selection, Projection, Cartesian product, Union, and Set Difference. • These perform most of the data retrieval operations needed. • Also have Join, Intersection which can be expressed in terms of 5 basic operations.

  18. Relational Algebra Operations

  19. Relational Algebra Operations

  20. 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).

  21. Example - Selection (or Restriction) • List all staff with a salary greater than £10,000. salary > 10000 (Staff)

  22. 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.

  23. Example - Projection • Produce a list of salaries for all staff, showing only staffNo, fName, lName, and salary details. staffNo, fName, lName, salary(Staff)

  24. Union • R  S • 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. • If R and S have I and J tuples, respectively, union is obtained by concatenating them into one relation with a maximum of (I + J) tuples.

  25. Example - Union • List all cities where there is either a branch office or a property for rent. city(Branch) city(PropertyForRent)

  26. 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.

  27. Example - Set Difference • List all cities where there is a branch office but no properties for rent. city(Branch) – city(PropertyForRent)

  28. Intersection • R  S • Defines a relation consisting of the set of all tuples that are in both R and S. • R and S must be union-compatible. • Expressed using basic operations: R  S = R – (R – S)

  29. Example - Intersection • List all cities where there is both a branch office and at least one property for rent. city(Branch) city(PropertyForRent)

  30. Cartesian product • R X S • Defines a relation that is the concatenation of every tuple of relation R with every tuple of relation S.

  31. 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))

  32. Example - Cartesian product and Selection • Use selection operation to extract those tuples where Client.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo. sClient.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo((ÕclientNo,fName,lName(Client))  (ÕclientNo,propertyNo,comment(Viewing))) • Cartesian product and Selection can be reduced to a single operation called a Join.

  33. Join Operations • Join is a derivative of Cartesian product. • Equivalent to performing a Selection, using join predicate as selection formula, over Cartesian product of the two operand relations. • One of the most difficult operations to implement efficiently in an RDBMS and one reason why RDBMSs have intrinsic performance problems.

  34. Join Operations • Various forms of join operation • Theta join • Equijoin (a particular type of Theta join) • Natural join • Outer join • Semijoin

  35. 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))

  36. 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.

  37. 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))

More Related