Computing - Databases

2020-11-24
4 min read
What is a relational database??

A method of creating a database using tables of related data.

Records in a relational database are indexed by??

A primary key.

What is an example of tables for a car rental business??
  • Customers
  • Rentals
  • Vehicles
What is an example of the attributes for a customer in a car rental business??
  • Name
  • Address
  • Phone
  • Email
What’s another word for tables in a relational databse??

Relations

What does one row in a table represent in a relational database??

A record.

What does one column in a table represent in a relational database??

A column.

What is a flat file database??

Where all the data is stored in one table.

In terms of customers and rentals, what is a many-to-many relationship??

Customers can rent many different cars and cars can be rented by many different customers.

What is a composite key??

A key derived from a combination of other primary keys.

What is a key from another table called??

A foreign key.

What is a foreign key??

A key from another table.

What is the focus of a database??

The elimination of redundant data.

What is the benefit of creating relationships in a database??

Changes made to one part of the database are reflected across the database as a whole.

PHOTO ONE TO ONE What does this mean in databases??

One to one.

PHOTO ONE TO MANY What does this mean in databases??

One to many.

PHOTO MANY TO MANY What does this mean in databases??

Many to many.

What is the symbol for one to one in databases??

PHOTO ONE TO ONE

What is the symbol for one to many in databases??

PHOTO ONE TO MANY

What is the symbol for many to many in databases??

PHOTO MANY TO MANY

Each table holds information about what in a database??

An entity.

Wjat is normalisation??

A process used to come up with the best possible design for a database.

What are the three types of normalisation??
  • 1st Normal Form
  • 2nd Normal Form
  • 3rd Normal Form
What is the benefit of normalisation??

Data is not duplicated over the database.

What does $2NF$ mean in databases??

2nd Normal Form.

What is first normal form??
  • No repeating attributes
  • Attributes are atomic
Why is a Name column consiting of “John Doe” not atomic??

Because “John Doe” can be broken down into a first name and last name.

What does it mean for data to be atomic??

It cannot be split up any more than it already has.

PHOTO DATABASE NOT FIRST NORMAL FORM This database is not in first normal form. Why??

Because the table contains repeated attributes.

PHOTO DATABASE NOT FIRST NORMAL FORM Is this database atomic??

Yes.

PHOTO DATABASE FIRST NORMAL FORM Which table uses composite keys??

tblEnrolment

What is second normal form??
  • In first normal form
  • No partial dependencies
When can partial dependencies occur in a table??

When the primary key is a composite key.

PHOTO TABLE ENROLLMENT Why is this table in second-normal form??

There are no attributes that are dependent on only Members or Classes.

PHOTO TABLE ENROLLMENT If there was a column for class name, why wouldn’t the table be in second normal form??

Because class names are only relevant to the Classes and not Members. Therefore it’s a partial dependency.

What is third normal form??
  • In second normal form
  • No non-key dependencies
What’s the slogan for third normal form??

All attributes are dependent on the key, the whole key and nothing but the key.

What three things could you improve about a centralised database system??
  • Server hardware
  • Network
  • The database software
What four techniques can you use to deal with concurrent access to a database??
  1. Record locking
  2. Table locks with serialisation
  3. Timestamp ordering
  4. Commitment ordering
What is record locking??

Using a lock to prevent concurrent access to a specific part of the database.

What are table locks with serialisation??

Where locks are used to make sure transactions occur in the order they happened.

What is timestamp ordering??

Commands are executed based on the timestamp for when the data was last written or read.

What is commitment ordering??

In general, transactions occur in the order they are recieved but transactions that cause a deadlock with be delayed.


Metadata
date: 2020-11-24 10:06
tags:
- '@?computing'
- '@?public'
- '@?fundementals-of-databases'
title: Computing - Databases