3rd Edition

Database Design Using Entity-Relationship Diagrams

    388 Pages 130 B/W Illustrations
    by Auerbach Publications

    388 Pages 130 B/W Illustrations
    by Auerbach Publications

    388 Pages 130 B/W Illustrations
    by Auerbach Publications

    Essential to database design, entity-relationship (ER) diagrams are known for their usefulness in data modeling and mapping out clear database designs. They are also well-known for being difficult to master. With Database Design Using Entity-Relationship Diagrams, Third Edition, database designers, developers, and students preparing to enter the field can quickly learn the ins and outs of data modeling through ER diagramming.

    Building on the success of the bestselling first and second editions, this accessible text includes a new chapter on the relational model and functional dependencies. It also includes expanded chapters on Enhanced Entity-Relationship (EER) diagrams and reverse mapping. It uses cutting-edge case studies and examples to help readers master database development basics and defines ER and EER diagramming in terms of requirements (end user requests) and specifications (designer feedback to those requests), facilitating agile database development. This book

    • Describes a step-by-step approach for producing an ER diagram and developing a relational database from it
    • Contains exercises, examples, case studies, bibliographies, and summaries in each chapter
    • Details the rules for mapping ER diagrams to relational databases
    • Explains how to reverse engineer a relational database back to an entity-relationship model
    • Includes grammar for the ER diagrams that can be presented back to the user, facilitating agile database development

    The updated exercises and chapter summaries provide the real-world understanding needed to develop ER and EER diagrams, map them to relational databases, and test the resulting relational database. Complete with a wealth of additional exercises and examples throughout, this edition should be a basic component of any database course. Its comprehensive nature and easy-to-navigate structure make it a resource that students and professionals will turn to throughout their careers.

    1. Data, Databases and the Software Engineering Process
    2. Data and Data Model
    3. The Relational Model and Functional Dependencies
    4. The Basic ER Diagram: A Data Modeling Schema
    5. Beyond the First Entity Diagram
    6. Extending Relationships/Structural Constraints
    7. The Weak Entity
    8. Further Extensions for ER Diagrams with Binary Relationships
    9. Ternary and Other Higher Order Diagrams
    10. The Enhanced Entity Relationship (EER) Model
    11. Relational Mapping and Reverse Engineering ER/EER Diagrams
    12. A Brief Overview of the Barker/Oracle Like Model.

    Biography

    Dr. Sikha Saha Bagui is an associate professor and interim associate chair in the Department of Computer Science at the University of West Florida, Pensacola, Florida. She teaches a variety of computer science and database courses, and her research areas of concentration are database design, web databases, data mining and statistical computing. Dr. Bagui has published many journal articles and co-authored several books with Dr. Earp.

    Dr. Richard Walsh Earp, Professor Emeritus, is a former chair of and former associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and former dean of the College of Science and Technology at the University of West Florida in Pensacola, Florida. Dr. Earp was also an instructor with Learning Tree International and worked for Computer Sciences Corporation at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola as a database consultant after his retirement from academia. He has co-authored several books with Dr. Bagui.