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Normalization

Normalization. Purpose: process to eliminate redundancy in relations due to functional or multi-valued dependencies. Decompose relation schema into Normal forms: Boyce-Codd Normal Form (BCNF) Third Normal Form (3NF) Fourth Normal Form (4NF)

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Normalization

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  1. Normalization • Purpose: process to eliminate redundancy in relations due to functional or multi-valued dependencies. • Decompose relation schema into Normal forms: • Boyce-Codd Normal Form (BCNF) • Third Normal Form (3NF) • Fourth Normal Form (4NF) • To obtain the new relations, project the schemas onto the original relation schema (e.g. Movie) • To recover information (I.e. Movie) from the new relations: natural join the new relations.

  2. BCNF Decomposition Example 3.24 pp 104 • Relation: Movie(title, year, length, filmType, studioName, starName) • Key: {title, year, starName} • FD’s: title year  length filmType studioName is a BCNF violation, so Movie not in BCNF • Decomposition: Schema 1: {title, year,length, filmType, studioName} Schema 2: {title, year, starName} • To obtain the new relations, project the schemas onto Movie • To recover information (I.e. Movie) from the new relations: natural join the new relations. Does not lose information.

  3. Functional Dependencies (FD) • Given: relation schema R(A1, …, An), and X and Y be subsets of (A1, … An). FD : X  Y means X functionally determines Y e.g. A1A2…An  B1B2…Bm • A1A2…An B1B2…Bm is an assertion about R that two attributes or sets of attributes in R are dependent of one another.

  4. Mutivalued Dependencies (MVD) • Given: relation schema R, and A1A2…An and B1B2…Bm be subsets of attributes of R. MVD : A1A2…An B1B2…Bm holds in R if : For each pair of tuples t and u of relation R that agree on all the A’s, we can find in R some tuple v that agrees: • With both t and u on the A’s, • With t on the B’s, and • With u on all attributes of R that are not among the A’s or B’s • A1A2…An B1B2…Bm is an assertion about R that two attributes or sets of attributes in R are independent of one another. • Cause redundancy not related to FD’s in a BCNF schema. • Most common source: putting 2 or more many-many relationships in a single relation.

  5. MVD Rules • Trivial dependencies rule If A1A2…An B1B2…Bm holds for R, then A1A2…An C1C2…Ck holds where the C’s are the B’s + one or more of the A’s. The converse also hold. • Transitive rule If A1A2…An B1B2…Bm and B1B2…Bm C1C2…Ck then A1A2…An C1C2…Ck • Splitting rule does not hold E.g. name  street city, but not name  street So, always start with set of attributes on the R.S. because splitting rule does not hold.

  6. A’s B’s t u More MVD Rules • Every FD is an MVD Because If FD A1A2…An B1B2…Bm, then swapping B’s between tuples that agree on A’s doesn’t create new tuples. • Complementation rule If X  Y, then X  Z, where Z is all attributes not in X or Y e.g. Star_Star_In {name, street, city, title, year} name  street city name title year

  7. Nontrivial MVD A1A2…An B1B2…Bm for a relation R is nontrivial if: • B1B2…Bm is not a subset of A1A2…An • A1A2…An  B1B2…Bm is not all attributes of R

  8. Fourth Normal Form (4NF) • Decompose relations that has MVD’s into 4NF to eliminate MVD’s. • Definition: R is in 4NF if A1A2…An B1B2…Bm is a nontrivial MVD, {A1A2…An} is a superkey. • Since every FD is an MVD, so 4NF is more stringent than BCNF • Only nontrivial MVD’s has the potential to violate 4NF

  9. R Y X 4NF Decomposition Given: relation R, and nontrivial MVD X  Y that violate 4NF • Decompose X  Y into XY and X  (R-Y) • Produce the relations by projecting R onto XY and X  (R-Y) • Reconstruct R from the new relations using natural join e.g. Star_Star_In {name, street, city, title, year} and name  street city Decompose Star_Star_In using name  street city into {name, street, city} and {name, title, year}

  10. Relationships among normal forms • 4NF is the most stringent • 4NF  BCNF  3NF

  11. Lossless-join decomposition Given: Relation R, decomposed into schemes R1, R2, … Rk, and D is a set of dependencies. Definition: R1, R2, … Rk is a lossless-join (w.r.t. D) if for every relation r for R satisfying D: r = R1(r) R2(r) …Rk(r) i.e. Every relation r for R is the natural join of its projections onto the Ri’s. The lossless-join property is necessary if the decomposed relation is to be recoverable from its decomposition. However, joins are expensive. So, don’t over decompose!

  12. Structured Query Language (SQL) • A DDL and DML for relational DBMSs • History: ANSI SQL, , SQL-92 (SQL2), SQL-99 (SQL3) • SQL-99 extends SQL2 with object-relational features and other new features • Most DBMS vendors implements the core, and then add bells and whistles and variations • Query capability is close to relational algebra, with lots of extensions. • Case insensitive except characters inside quoted strings ' ' e.g. 'Smith'  'SMITH' • ; as statement delimiter

  13. Example database schema Movie(title, year, length, inColor, studioName, producerC#) StartIn(movieTitle, movieYear, starName) MovieStar(name, address, gender, birthdate) MovieExec(name, address, cert#, netWorth) Studio(name, address, presC#)

  14. SQL Quries – basic form SELECT attribute/s FROM relations / views /subqury WHERE conditional expression;

  15. SQL query examples • Example 1: SELECT * FROM Movie; -- * => all attributes of Movie • Example 2: SELECT * FROM Movie WHERE studioName = 'Disney' AND year = 1990; • Example 3: SELECT title, length FROM Movie WHERE studioName = 'Disney' AND year = 1990;

  16. Duplicates • SQL generally operates using bags instead of sets • Exception: UNION, INTERSECT, EXCEPT operation • To eliminate duplicates, add keyword DISTINCT to the SELECT clause e.g. SELECT DISTINCT starName FROM StarsIn; • Duplicate elimination is costly. Use judiciously.

  17. SQL Correspondence to Relational Algebra SELECT L--  R.A. project FROM R--  R.A. operands WHERE C ; --  R.A. select R.A. expression: L(C(R)) When reading and writing queries: • FROM -- what relations are involved • WHERE -- what's the tuples selection criteria • SELECT -- what columns to output

  18. Union, Intersection, Difference of Queries • UNION : R1 UNION R2 or (Q1) UNION (Q2) e.g. (SELECT title, year FROM Movie) UNION (SELECT movieTitle AS title, movieYear AS year FROM StarsIn); • INTERSECT : R1 INTERSECT R2 or (Q1) INTERSECT (Q2) • EXCEPT: R1 EXCEPT R2 -- difference (Q1) EXCEPT (Q2)

  19. Union, Intersection, Difference of Queries (continued) • Q1 and Q2 are queries that produce relations • R1 and R2, or results of Q1 and Q2 should have the same list of attributes and attribute types. Rename if necessary. • Duplicates are eliminated automatically • Add the keyword ALL after UNION, INTERSECT, or EXCEPT to prevent duplicates elimination

  20. SQL and Relational Algebra • The six independent operations are implemented by SQL • SQL is relational complete

  21. Some data values in SQL • Strings • Dates and Times • Null values • Truth value of Unknown

  22. 1. Strings • Comparison operators (according to lexicographical order) <, >, <=, >= = • LIKE -- pattern matching • % -- matches any sequence of 0 or more characters • _ -- matches any one character • E.g.: title LIKE 'Star _ _ _ _' • E.g.: title LIKE '%''s%' • Can specify escape character • E.g. title LIKE 'x%%x%' ESCAPE 'x'

  23. 2. Dates and Times • Date constant: DATE '2002-10-01' • Time constant: TIME '15:00:02.5' • Timestamp (combines dates and times): TIMESTAMP '2002-10-01 15:00:02.5‘ (beware of implementation differences!) • Comparison operators apply

  24. 3. Null Values • NULL to represent: • Value unknown • Value inapplicable • Value withheld • Operations involving NULL • Arithmetic operation: result is NULL • Comparison: result is UNKNOWN • NULL is not a constant, therefore NULL cannot be used explicitly as an operand. • IS NULL and IS NOT NULL checks • Read "Pitfalls Regarding Nulls" pp. 250

  25. 4. UNKNOWN • Consider TRUE = 1, FALSE = 0, UNKNOWN = 0.5 • AND of 2 truth-value = min. of the 2 values • OR of 2 truth-value = max. of the 2 values • Negation of v = 1-v • Refer Fig. 6.2 pp. 250 for truth table for 3-valued logic

  26. The Six Clauses in SQL Queries • SELECT -- required • FROM -- required • WHERE • GROUP BY • HAVING -- if used, must follows a group by clause • ORDER BY • Subqueries may appear in the FROM clause and the WHERE clause • Comments begins with ‘--’

  27. Table level SQL (ref. 6.6, pp. 292) • Create table – to define the schema of a base table (Ref. 6.6.1 for data types syntax) E.g. create table EMP ( empno int not null, lastName varchar(30) not null, firstName varchar(30) not null, num_of_children int, constraint pk_EMP primary key(empno) ); • Drop table – to destroy a base table e.g. drop table EMP;

  28. Tuple Modification Statements (ref. 6.5, pp. 286) • Insert – to add a row Syntax: insert into R(A1..An) values (v1…vn) • E.g. insert into emp(empno, lastName, firstName, num_of_children)values (12345, ‘Doe’, ‘John’, 1) • Or insert into emp values (12345, ‘Doe’, ‘John’, 1) • Delete – to remove a row Syntax: delete from R where <condition> • E.g. delete from emp where empno = 12345 • Update – to modify the contents of a row Syntax: update R set Ai = value where Aj = targetValue • E.g. update emp set num_of_children = 2 where empno = 12345

  29. Some JOINS in SQL. (ref. pp. 270) • CROSS JOIN --  R.A. cartesian product e.g. Movie CROSS JOIN StarsIn; • JOIN … ON --  R.A. theta-join e.g. Movie JOIN StarsIn ON title = movieTitle AND year = movieYear; • [NATURAL] JOIN --  R.A. natural join e.g. MovieStar NATURAL JOIN MovieExec; or MovieStar JOIN MovieExec; • OUTERJOINS -- joins that include dangling tuples

  30. OUTERJOINS • An operator to augment the result of a join by the dangling tuples, padded with null values. • Full outerjoin of R1 and R2 is a join that includes all rows from R1 and R2 matched or not. Unmatched rows are padded with NULLs. • LEFT outerjoin of R1 and R2 is a join that includes all rows from R1, matched or not, plus the matching values from R2. Unmatched rows are padded with NULLs. • RIGHT outerjoin of R1 and R2 is a join that includes all rows from R2, matched or not, plus the matching values from R1. Unmatched rows are padded with NULLs. • The joining may be NATURAL or theta join

  31. Outerjoins Syntax • R1 NATURAL {FULL | LEFT | RIGHT} OUTER JOIN R2; E.g. 1. MovieStar NATURAL FULL OUTER JOIN MovieExec; E.g. 2. MovieStar NATURAL LEFT OUTER JOIN MovieExec; E.g. 3. MovieStar NATURAL RIGHT OUTER JOIN MovieExec;

  32. Outerjoins Syntax (continued) • R1 {FULL | LEFT | RIGHT} OUTER JOIN R2 ON conditional expression; E.g. 1. Movie FULL OUTER JOIN StarsIn ON title = movieTitle AND year = movieYear; E.g. 2. MovieStar LEFT OUTER JOIN StarsIn ON title = movieTitle AND year = movieYear; E.g. 3. MovieStar RIGHT OUTER JOIN StarsIn ON title = movieTitle AND year = movieYear;

  33. Use result of joins as subqueries in queries • E.g. SELECT title, year, length, inColor, studioName, producerC#, starName FROM Movie JOIN StarsIn ON title = movieTitle AND year = movieYear;

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