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ER Diagram Models SE Examples

The document discusses data modeling concepts including entities, relationships, attributes, keys, and entity-relationship (ER) diagrams. It defines entities as objects that exist in the real world and can be distinguished from other objects. Relationships represent associations between entities. Attributes define properties of entities. Primary keys uniquely identify entities. ER diagrams can depict entities, relationships, and attributes to model parts of the real world.

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Khushal Kumar
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
134 views68 pages

ER Diagram Models SE Examples

The document discusses data modeling concepts including entities, relationships, attributes, keys, and entity-relationship (ER) diagrams. It defines entities as objects that exist in the real world and can be distinguished from other objects. Relationships represent associations between entities. Attributes define properties of entities. Primary keys uniquely identify entities. ER diagrams can depict entities, relationships, and attributes to model parts of the real world.

Uploaded by

Khushal Kumar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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OUTLINE

• Data model
• Concepts of entity and relationships
• E-R diagramming
• Keys
• Weak entities
• Extended E-R model

1
DATA MODEL
• for representation of a part of a real world
• it is an abstraction of the reality : ignores
unnecessary details
• represents operational data about real world
events, entities, activities, etc.
• model may be at various levels depending of
requirements :
• logical or physical
• external, conceptual, internal

2
Data Model……
• a good model
• is easy to understand
• has a few concepts
• permits top-down specifications
• model offers concepts, constructs and operations
• must capture meaning of data (data semantics)
which help us in interpreting and manipulating
data

3
Data Model……
• semantics captured through data types, inter-
relationships and data integrity constraints
• uniqueness
• existence dependence
• restrictions on some operations such as insertions,
deletions

4
ENTITY-RELATIONSHIP (ER)
MODEL
• for representation of real-world
• represents overall logical structure of information
• grouping of data elements
• inter-relationships between groups

5
ER MODEL….
• a few concepts
• simple and easy-to-use
• permits top-down approach for controlling
details
• useful as a tool for communication between
designer and user during requirements analysis
and conceptual design

6
ENTITY
• an object that exists
• distinguishable from other objects
• could be concrete or abstract
• Examples : a book, an item, a student, a purchase
order
(a/an above indicates that we are referring to one of
these)

7
ENTITY SET
• a set of similar entities
• need not be disjoint with other entity sets
• e.g., supplier and customer may have common entities
• Example : set of all books in a library
• set of all customers
• entity set also called entity type or entity class
• entity considered as an occurrence of entity type

8
ENTITY SET……
• we often use the words ‘entity’ to mean ‘entity-
set’
• entity sets are named using singular common
nouns :
Book
Student
Course

9
ATTRIBUTE
• an entity has a set of attributes
• attribute defines property of an entity
• it is given a name
• attribute has value for each entity
• value may change over time
• same set of attributes are defined for entities in an
entity set

10
ATTRIBUTE….
• Example : entity set BOOK has the following
attributes
TITLE ISBN
ACC-NO AUTHOR
PUBLISHER YEAR
PRICE
• a particular book has value for each of the above
attributes

11
ATTRIBUTE….
• an attribute may be multi-valued, i.e., it has more
than one value for a given entity; e.g., a book may
have many authors
• an attribute which uniquely identifies entities of a
set is called primary key attribute of that entity
set
• composite attribute : date, address, etc

12
DOMAIN
• gives set of permitted values for an attribute
• all values may not be present at all times in
database
• may be defined by type : integer, string
• attributes are ‘roles’ played by domains
• domain ‘personname’ can be used for attribute
‘name’ for teacher and student entities

13
EXAMPLE : A COLLEGE
• STUDENT : rollno, name, hostel-no., date-of-
birth
• COURSE : courseno, name, credits
• TEACHER : empno, name, rank, room-no., tel-
phone
• DEPT : name, tel-phone

14
EXAMPLE : A COLLEGE…
• this example will be refined further
• perception of reality and focus of design could
have indicated more entities
• HOSTEL SEMESTER
• Or, teacher could only be an attribute

EXERCISE : identify entities in a hospital and


give a few instances of each
15
RELATIONSHIP
• represents association among entities
• e.g., a particular book is a text for particular
course
• book ‘Database Systems’ by C.J. Date is text for
course identified by code ‘CS644’
• e.g., student GANESH has enrolled for course
CS644

16
RELATIONSHIP SET
• set of relationships of same type
• words ‘relationship’ and ‘relationship set’ often
used interchangeably
• between certain entity sets
• binary relationship : between two entity sets
• ternary relationship : among three entity sets

17
RELATIONSHIP SET….
• e.g., binary relationship set STUDY between
STUDENT and COURSE
• relationship STUDY could be ternary among
STUDENT, COURSE and TEACHER
• What is the difference ?
• a relationship may have attributes
• e.g., attribute GRADE and SEMESTER for STUDY

18
RELATIONSHIP SET….
• relationships named using verbs or nouns
Study
Enroll
Order

EXERCISE : identify relationships and their


attributes in the hospital example and give a
few instances of each

19
DEPICTING A RELATIONSHIP
• entity sets as a collection
• entity instances by small circles
• relationship instances by small rectangle with
connections to involved entities

20
21
RELATIONSHIP CARDINALITY
• is a constraint on a relationship
• it characterizes relationships further
• given as (mapping) cardinality : how many
entities of an entity set participate in a
relationship
• especially useful for binary relationships

22
RELATIONSHIP CARDINALITY…
• a relationship set R between entity sets A and B
may be one of the following
• one-to-one : one entity in A associated with at most
one entity in B
• one-to-many : one entity in A may be associated with
zero/more number of entities in B. However, one
entity in B can be associated with at most one entity
from A.
• many-to-one : reverse of above definition (like a
mathematical function)

23
RELATIONSHIP CARDINALITY…
• many-to-many : one entity in A may be associated
with any number of entities in B, and vice-versa.
• EXAMPLES :
• relationship set TEACHES from TEACHER to
COURSE is one-to-many
(TAUGHT-BY from COURSE to TEACHER is many-
to-one)
• relationship STUDY between STUDENT and
COURSE is many-to-many

24
EXISTENCE DEPENDENCE
• existence dependency : another important
constraint
• existence of entity ‘a’ may depend on existence of
another entity ‘b’:
‘b’ is called dominant entity and ‘a’ is called
subordinate entity

25
EXISTENCE DEPENDENCE…
• there exists existence dependency of
• TEACHER on DEPT as no teacher can be appointed
without fixing her department
• Subordinate entity has its own key and may
participate in more relationship

26
27
28
E-R Diagram : Examples

29
• Add some attributes to entities here
• Courses may have another course as pre-requisite
30
31
32
33
• Describe the real-world mapped above in words.
• Can you represents this : a supplier may supply same part many times
Note : Relationship ‘supplies’ could also be ternary 34
TERNARY RELATIONSHIPS
• be sure that your model reflects real-world
correctly
• ternary (or, of higher order) relationships are
harder to understand
• is a ternary equivalent to two binary? if not,
which one is correct in a given situation?

35
TERNARY RELATIONSHIPS…
• consider shipments data where parts are supplied
to projects by suppliers in certain quantities;
given :
S1 supplies 40 number of P1 to J1
• we lose context if we replace it by
S1 supplies 40 of P1
S1 supplies to J1
• thus, ternary relationship is not same as two binary
relationships

36
37
38
PRIMARY KEYS
• to distinguish occurrences of entities and
relationships
• distinction made using values of some attributes
• superkey : set of one/more attributes which, taken
collectively, uniquely identify an entity in an
entity set
• superkey may contain extraneous attributes

39
PRIMARY KEYS…..
• e.g., rollno is sufficient to identify students
• it is a primary key
• combination (rollno, name) is a superkey
• name itself may not be sufficient as key
• candidate key is minimal superkey. No subset of
it is a superkey
• an entity may have multiple candidate keys
• primary key is a candidate key chosen by
designer as the principal means of identification

40
PRIMARY KEY FOR
REPATIONSHIPS
• made of primary keys of all participating entities
e.g., primary key of STUDY is
(rollno, courseno)

41
WEAK ENTITY
• does not have a primary key on its own
• they are related to one/more ‘strong’ entities
• they often can be visualized as multivalued
attribute or group of attributes
• they either have a ‘partial’ key or we add one to
distinguish between those which are related to
same strong entity

42
WEAK ENTITY…
• examples:
• branches of a bank
• interviews between candidates and companies viewed
as entities (not relationships) so that they can
participate further in relationships
• E-R diagrams follow

43
44
WEAK ENTITY…
• partial key (BrName in example) also called
discriminatory attribute
• a weak entity can participate further in
relationships with other entities
• a weak entity can also have weak entities
dependent on in
• primary key of weak entity = primary key of its
strong entity + discriminating attribute of weak
entity within the context of strong entity

45
• shows weak entity depending on two strong entities.

46
EXERCISE (Post-Graduate studies)
Students join a particular specialization offered by a
department. A specialization with same title (e.g.,
MICROCOMPUTER) may be offered by one/more depts
independently. Teachers are appointed to a specific dept,
and given a room and telephone. Depts have some
teacher as its head. Courses are offered under various
specializations. A teacher may teach many courses and a
course may be taught by many. A student studies a
course under a teacher during some semester (e.g.,
semester 1 of 1989), and is awarded a grade. A teacher’s
research interest may lie in one/more specializations.
Courses have one/more/zero prerequisites

47
EXTENDED E-R MODEL
• extensions to capture more meaning
• concepts of generalization, aggregation and sub-
set hierarchies added
• Similar to OO concepts : inheritance, composite
objects

48
Generalization
• to generalize from two or more entity sets and
factor out commonality
• entity E is generalization of entities E1, E2, E3 …
if each instance of E is also an instance of one and
only one of E1, E2, etc.; E called superclass of E1,
E2, …
• represented by IS-A relationship

49
Generalization…

• Example : given two entities Faculty and Non-


faculty,we can define a ‘general’ entity called
Employee
• Common attributes are factored out to define
‘Employee’ entity; specific (non-common)
attributes incorporated in ‘Faculty’ and ‘Non-
faculty’ entities

50
51
Another example :

52
Specialization
• also called subset hierarchy
• entity E1 is subset of E if every instance of E1 is also
an instance of E; this is also IS-A relationship
• E called superset and E1 as subset (or sub-class); E
may have multiple and possibly over-lapping subsets
• every instance in E need not be present in subsets of E

53
Specialization…..
• specialization allows classification of an entity in
subsets based on some distinguishing
attribute/property
• we may have several specialization of same entity
• the subsets may have additional attributes

54
55
Inheritance
• there is inheritance of attributes from superclass
or superset
• the subclass/subset automatically inherits
attributes defined at superclass/superset level
• thus, inheritance present in both Generalization
and specialization
• Direction important : bottom-up in generalization,
top-down in Specialization
• Important to distinguish the two cases

56
Aggregation
• for building complex entity from existing entities
(or existing entities and relationships)
• two ways of defining complex entities :
• create an attribute whose value is another entity
• define an entity as containing a group of related
entities

57
Examples :
• Work-order object (entity) defined as consisting
of entities Raw-material, Tools and Workers;
• Work-order itself related with Customer entity
• Aggregation notation not explicitly provided in
Extended E-R model

58
Work-order
Raw Material Tools

Worker

Customer

JobNo Quantity

59
(ANSWER TO EXERCISE)

60
Going from E-R to Relational Data Model

Need to match
ER model concepts : entity, relationship, attribute
with
Relational model concepts : relation, attribute

entity Student ( rollno, name, …. )


Student

rollno name ….

61
E-R to Relational …

1 1
1:1 Dept Mgr

DNo …… MName ……

DEPT (DNo , ………. , MName )


MGR (MName , ……, DNo )

also keys; in one or both


62
E-R to Relational …

1 m
Bank Branch Client

ACno Name ……
BName Loc ……

BKBranch (BName , Loc , ………. )


Client (Name , ……, BName , Loc , ACno )
The relationship is included in the entity on ‘many’ side;
It includes primary key of entity on ‘one’ side and
Relationship attributes, if any
63
E-R to Relational …

m m
Std Reg Course

R# …… Grade C# ……

STD (R# , ………. )


COURSE (C# , …… )
REG (R# , C# , Grade)

64
Exercise: Airport database
• keeps track of airplanes, their owners, airport
employees and pilots
• Each airplane has a registration number, is of a
particular plane type and is stored in a particular
hanger. Each plane type has a model number,
capacity and weight. Each hanger has a number,
capacity and location. The database also keeps track
of who owns which plane. Persons have name,
address and phones. A person buys a plane on a
particular date and cost.

65
Airport database….
• Each plane undergoes service many times. A service
information contains date of work, nature, hours
spent, cost, etc. Pilots and employees are persons.
Pilots have a license number with validity and salary.
Employees have a number, rank and salary. Each
pilot is authorized to fly certain types of planes.
Employees are involved in servicing of planes.
• prepare E-R model
• convert to the relational model

66
Exercises

Prepare E-R models and convert to relational


schema

• Railway Reservation
• 30 days in advance
• trains, stations, quotas, coaches
• passengers, tickets, wait-list, etc.

67
Exercises…
• Old Car Mart
• buying and selling of old cars
• cars, purchases, sales – direct or installment-wise
• service to sold cars, pre-sale repairs
• agents
• Cricket Database
• countries, players, teams
• matches, results, scores
• Prepare sample data

68

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