csnotes/cst363/lec/lec2.md
2018-09-12 14:10:16 -07:00

1.8 KiB

lec2

Covering tables, tuples, data stuff

Problem Statement \

We need to be able to manipulate data easily

IMS had been using trees for a while a long time ago

Rows --> atributes

Columns --> tuple

somtimes we refer to the title of the columns to be fields

Table --> relation

relational instance as well for another term

Domain

The set of values allowed in a field

NULL

cant operate on it at all

Count

The only thing that lets you operate on NULL. Even then you only get 0 back.

Keys Types

Super Key

Candidate Key

Primary Key

Problem Statement

The rows are not distinguishable from each other; we still have a mes of data sitting there unlabeled. Some kind of identifier is necessary to be able to access every tuple in the relational set.

SuperKey

Set of attr is a superkey for a table as long as that combination of fields remains unique for every tuple in the relational set. In other words if we have multiple fields; f1 f3 f5 might be a good combo to use as a key into the table.

What's a valid superkey?

For starters anything that contains another valid superkey Any subset of a full tuple that can uniquely identify any row in the table.

Can a whole row be a superkey? ...full on brainlet.........yes

Candidate Key

Any super key that wouldn't be a superkey if one of the attr were removed. Say then that we have a super key that takes columns {1,3,5,6,7}, but removing anyone of the rows no longer reliably returns an arbitrary unique row.

Primary key

Any candidate key the database designer has chosen to serve as the unique

Foreign Key

Set of attrs in one table that are the primary key attrs of another table. More info about this key type will come later but just know for now that it exists in the wild.