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Lecture 8Database Theory & Practice (2) : The Relational Data Model
UFCEKG-20-2 Data, Schemas & Applications
Origins of the Relational Modelo The relational model was developed by EF Codd in the early 1970s. o Commercial systems based on the relational model appeared in the
late 1970s. o At present there are several hundred relational DBMSs and most
computer vendors support 'relational' software. o Examples of well-known products include Oracle, DB2, Sybase,
MySQL, MS.SQL Server and MS Access.
Informally, a relational system is a system in which:1. The data is perceived by the user as tables (and nothing but tables).2. The operators available to the user for (e.g.) retrieval are operators that derive “new” tables from "old" ones. For example, there is one operator, restrict, which extract a subset of the rows of a given table, and another, project, which extracts a subset of columns - and a row subset and a column subset of a table can both be regarded in turn as tables in their own right.
Components and terminology (1)The model uses terminology taken from mathematics, particularly set theory and predicate logic.
Basic terminology used in relational theory includes:
o relation - this corresponds to a table or flat file with columns and rows
o tuple - a row of a relationo attribute - a named column of a relationo domain - the set of allowable values for one or more
attributeso degree of a relation - the number of attributes it contains o cardinality of relation - the number of tuples it contains.
Components and terminology (2)
Properties of relations
o There is only one data structure in the relational data model - the relation.
o Every relation and every attribute within a relation must have a distinct name.
o Attribute (column) values of a relation are atomic (i.e. single valued).
o All values in an attribute (column) are taken from same domain.
o The ordering of columns in a relation is not significant.o Duplicate tuples (rows) are not allowed (e.g. each row in a
relation must be distinct).o The ordering of tuples (rows) and attributes (columns) is
not significant.
Relational algebra & relational calculuso Relational algebra (ra) and relational calculus (rc) are both
formal (mathematically based) languages defined by EF Codd.
o ra & rc are logically equivalent languages. ra is “procedural” and rc is “declarative” in nature.
o ra and rc are the formal grounding of the relational database model and illustrate the basic operations required by any data manipulation language such as SQL.
o Relational algebra is an offshoot of first-order logic, is a set of relations closed under operators. Operators operate on one or more relations to yield a relation.
o The “closure” property relates to the fact that from any given relational operation another relation is output - this is often referred to as the “relations in – relations out” property.
Relational algebra operators (1)
o Each relational operator takes one or more relations as its input and produces a new relation as output (closure). Codd originally defined eight operators, in two classes:
Set operators: UNION INTERSECTIONDIFFERENCE DIVIDE
The special relational operators:
RESTRICT PROJECT
JOIN Cartesian PRODUCT
Relational algebra operators (2)
Relational algebra operators (3)dept – emp – salgrade example (1)
Department : dept (depno, dname, location)Employee : emp (empno, ename, mgr, sal, deptno)Salary Grade : salgrade (grade, losal, hisal)
Relational algebra operators (4)dept – emp – salgrade example (2)
o dept table
deptno dname location10 Accounting New York20 Research Dallas30 Sales Chicago40 Operations Boston
Relational algebra operators (5)dept – emp – salgrade example (3)
empno ename mgr sal deptno7369 SMITH 7902 £800.00 207499 ALLEN 7698 £1,600.00 307521 WARD 7698 £1,250.00 307566 JONES 7839 £2,975.00 207654 MARTIN 7698 £1,250.00 307698 BLAKE 7839 £2,850.00 307782 CLARK 7839 £2,450.00 107788 SCOTT 7566 £3,000.00 207839 KING £5,000.00 107844 TURNER 7698 £1,500.00 307876 ADAMS 7788 £1,100.00 207900 JAMES 7698 £950.00 307902 FORD 7566 £3,000.00 207934 MILLER 7782 £1,300.00 10
o emp table
Relational algebra operators (6)dept – emp – salgrade example (4)
grade losal hisal
1 £700.00 £1,200.00
2 £1,201.00 £1,400.00
3 £1,401.00 £2,000.00
4 £2,001.00 £3,000.00
5 £3,001.00 £99,999.00
o salgrade table
Relational algebra operators (7)dept – emp – salgrade example (5)
o Restrict => subset of the Rows in a TableRESTRICT EMP WHERE sal > 2000
empno ename mgr sal deptno7566 JONES 7839 £2,975.00 207698 BLAKE 7839 £2,850.00 307782 CLARK 7839 £2,450.00 107788 SCOTT 7566 £3,000.00 207839 KING £5,000.00 107902 FORD 7566 £3,000.00 20
Relational algebra operators (8)dept – emp – salgrade example (6)
o Project => subset the Columns in a TablePROJECT EMP [EMPNO, SAL,DEPTNO]
empno sal deptno
7369 £800.00 20
7499 £1,600.00 30
7521 £1,250.00 30
7566 £2,975.00 20
7654 £1,250.00 30
7698 £2,850.00 30
7782 £2,450.00 10
7788 £3,000.00 20
7839 £5,000.00 10
7844 £1,500.00 30
7876 £1,100.00 20
7900 £950.00 30
7902 £3,000.00 20
7934 £1,300.00 10
Relational algebra operators (9)dept – emp – salgrade example (7)
o Restrict-ProjectRESTRICT EMP WHERE SAL >2000PROJECT EMP[EMPNO, SAL, DEPTNO]
empno sal deptno7566 £2,975.00 207698 £2,850.00 307782 £2,450.00 107788 £3,000.00 207839 £5,000.00 107902 £3,000.00 20
call this EMPXCould you reverse these operations - always? ( project then restrict?)
Relational algebra operators (10)dept – emp – salgrade example (8)
o Product => combine each row of one table with each row of the otherPRODUCT DEPT with EMPXempno sal EMPX.
deptno dept.
Depnodname loc
7566 £2,975.00 20 10 Accounting New York
7698 £2,850.00 30 10 Accounting New York
7782 £2,450.00 10 10 Accounting New York
7788 £3,000.00 20 10 Accounting New York
7839 £5,000.00 10 10 Accounting New York
7902 £3,000.00 20 10 Accounting New York
7566 £2,975.00 20 20 Research Dallas
7698 £2,850.00 30 20 Research Dallas
7782 £2,450.00 10 20 Research Dallas
7788 £3,000.00 20 20 Research Dallas
7839 £5,000.00 10 20 Research Dallas
7902 £3,000.00 20 20 Research Dallas
Relational algebra operators (11)dept – emp – salgrade example (9)
7566 £2,975.00 20 30 Sales Chicago
7698 £2,850.00 30 30 Sales Chicago
7782 £2,450.00 10 30 Sales Chicago
7788 £3,000.00 20 30 Sales Chicago
7839 £5,000.00 10 30 Sales Chicago
7902 £3,000.00 20 30 Sales Chicago
7566 £2,975.00 20 40 Operations Boston
7698 £2,850.00 30 40 Operations Boston
7782 £2,450.00 10 40 Operations Boston
7788 £3,000.00 20 40 Operations Boston
7839 £5,000.00 10 40 Operations Boston
7902 £3,000.00 20 40 Operations Boston
continued from last page :
Relational algebra operators (12)dept – emp – salgrade example (10)
o Product (Cartesian product)
DEPT has 4 recordsEMPX has 6 records
so DEPT x EMPX has 24 records
but not very useful
Relational algebra operators (13)dept – emp – salgrade example (11)
o Equi-Join =>product restricted to rows which have matching common domain
empno
sal EMPX. deptno
dept. deptno
dname loc
7566 £2,975.00 20 20 Research Dallas7698 £2,850.00 30 30 Sales Chicago7782 £2,450.00 10 10 Accounting New York7788 £3,000.00 20 20 Research Dallas7839 £5,000.00 10 10 Accounting New York7902 £3,000.00 20 20 Research Dallas
Relational algebra operators (14)dept – emp – salgrade example (12)
o Natural Join =>equi-join projected with the duplicate column removed
empno sal deptno
dname loc
7566 £2,975.00 20 Research Dallas7698 £2,850.00 30 Sales Chicago7782 £2,450.00 10 Accounting New York7788 £3,000.00 20 Research Dallas7839 £5,000.00 10 Accounting New York7902 £3,000.00 20 Research Dallas
Basic SQL
o SELECT * FROM EMP WHERE SAL > 2000;
o SELECT ENAME,SAL,DEPTNO FROM EMP;
o SELECT ENAME,SAL,DEPTNO FROM EMP WHERE SAL > 2000;
o SELECT * FROM EMP, DEPT WHERE SAL > 2000;
o SELECT * FROM EMP,DEPT WHERE SAL > 2000 AND EMP.DEPTNO =
DEPT.DEPTNO;
o SELECT EMPNO, SAL, DEPTNO, DNAME FROM EMP,DEPT WHERE SAL >
2000 AND EMP.DEPTNO = DEPT.DEPTNO;
Bibliography / Readings
Bibliography- An Introduction to Database Systems (8th ed.), C J Date, Addison Wesley
2004- Database Management Systems, P Ward & G Defoulas, Thomson 2006
Readings- Introduction to SQL, McGraw-Hill/Osbourne (handout)