Database Design
TODO When the PCDE course gets here,
start looking through the notes in the course repo already written and put them here.
Then start to go through the course as intended and refine the notes and add to them.
Relational Database Design
Pros vs Cons
Pros
- You do not define physical storage,
- You let the platform handle the particularities of individual bits, metadata, etc
- You do not need to define the logical access paths to data
- NO hardcording paths or access, etc.
- We are creating a data model,
or schema instead and the platform takes care of the rest
Cons
- NO built in protections against bad decisions about schema and
their relationships, they're everything.
Process of Creating a Database Model
- Understand what you are modeling
- Identify the separate entities that need to be captured
- Identify the properties of said entities
- Identify what unique identifiers exist for those entities
- Identify relationships between entities and properties.
Understand the Entity or Domain
Get info about the domain, it takes time & effort.
- What is the environment
- What are the sources of info?
- How will the input be done? By Whom?
- Actions to learn about data model to be made in an organization:
- Review files & forms
- Track how data moves through the organization
- Interview people who owk in different departments & perform different functions.
- Talk about data consumers & producers
- Think about how this data is consumed.
- Reports, purchase orders, statistical information, etc.
- Understan that gettting the data model wrong can be paintful.
- It's important to understand that the design process is highly iterative
- First results should be early so feedback can be made early
Identify Entities & Properties
- An entity is an object that has properties.
- Typically these become database tables
- As an example
- Entity: person
- Properties:
- Name
- DOB
- Weight
- Email
- etc.
- Each entity has corresponding properties
- Entities are the potential tables
- Properties are the potential columns
- Questions to ask yourself:
- Did I miss any entities or properties?
- Are the properties attached to the right entity?
- This is easy to get wrong
Identify Primary Keys, or What Makes an Entity Unique
- Why do you need a unique identifier?
- To look through tons of records and recall any one of them
- Also to tie different entities and properties together by their relationships
- Check if it already exists in the table
- For example, a GUID (Globally Unique Identifier) or UUID (Universally Unique Identifier)
- Take a look at the properties of a
Student
entity:
- FirstName
- LastName
- BirthDate
- City
- Region
- Country
- Which of these are unique?
- The answer is none
- FirstNames and LastNames frequently get reused.
- So does every other property.
- Not even combining FirstName and LastName results in true uniqueness
- Maybe combining everything creates a unique identifier,
- but this is often overcomplicated.
- Attaching a primary key
StudentID
is much simpler and provides uniqueness
- Primary Keys are the unique identifier of an entity.
- When creating relations to other entities or properties,
Foreign Keys are the unique identifiers as a property on an entity
pointing to another entity
Relationships Between Tables
- Cardinality is how one table relates to another.
- Typically cardinality breaks down into these 3 types:
- 1-to-1 (1:1)
- The simplest relationship but with some serious implications
- A student can only be in one college
- A patient can only be in one hospital
- If any other relationship is possible this can't be the cardinality
- This is why 1:1 relationships are actually somewhat rare in data modeling
- 1-to-many (1:m)
- Think a shopping cart full of products
- Or a mother's person number corresponding to the person numbers of her kids
- Quite common, possibly the most common relationship, usually a safe bet
- many-to-many (m:m)
- Requires seperate joint tables to track the
M * N
relationships that exist
- TODO Give diagrams or images showing these 3 relationships
Design Summary & Naming Practices
Sample Book Database
Let's walk through creating an actual database design with a real world domain.
Let's create a book database.
How do we come up with the entities, properties and the relationships.
There's a number of ?s that can be posed to design this data model:
- Which cities are the authords from?
- What number of books are above or below a certain price?
- Which authors have written the most books?
- Which authors have sold the most books?
- Which publishers have sold the most books?
- Which stores have sold the most books?
These are the sorts of questions that can
arise when considering the nature of data.
This is a good starting point when it comes to design,
the questions you might want answered from the data.
Hard Coded Policies
As well as asking those questions,
you might want to ask yourself:
What fixed rules are you capturing within your design?
Ie can an author have more than one book?
Perhaps not initially,
but eventually many authors in the database will write their second book.
Ie Can a book have more than one author?
Yes, many books are co-authored by many writers.
Ie Can a sales order be for more than one book?
Normally in a shop you might want to buy many books.
Ie Can an editor edit multiple books?
Yes, very likely, this is a book business, they usually edit many books.
Ie Can a book have more than one editor?
Again, yes, this does happen.
So track these kinds of questions because they become clues in how
the data model aught to be designed through these hardcoded rules.
Entities & Relationships in the Data Model
So, let's think here about the entities and relations we want to capture.
And the data model we want to create.
Once again, these are our:
- Tables
- Columns
- Relationships between tables, through columns
Active Learning
Identify the entities and the properties for the book business data model
There are many possibile solutions.
Let's start with a subset.
You can think of entities like:
- Authors
- Books
- Editors
- Publishers
...as being core parts of the design.
Authors
Properties
- AuthorId (PK)
- First name
- Last name
- BookId (FK) (m:m)
Books
Properties
- BookId (PK)
- Title
- AuthorId (FK) (m:m)
- EditorId (FK) (m:m)
- PublisherId (FK) (1:1)
Editors
Properties
- EditorId (PK)
- First Name
- Last Name
- BookId (FK) (m:m)
- PublisherId (FK) (1:m)
Publishers
Properties
- PublisherId (PK)
- PublisherName
- BookId (FK) (m:m)
- EditorId (FK) (m:m)
Naming Conventions
- Plurals for table names
- Singular for column names
- Names in Pascal case
- Primary keys
- Use consistent naming conventions
- Ie
DateOfBirth
in one table, DOB
in another is bad
- Avoid abbreviations if possible
- There's some industry standards that are well known that can be made exceptions
- Transparent naming schemes avoid confusion for other teammembers and yourself
- When revisiting code it's important to communicate intent to others & yourself
- Consider user expectations & knowledge
- Ie UI Design
- Ie ISBN is a UUID for a book, use it as the industry convention does
- For more info read about naming conventions in SQLShack's article
Cardinality for Sample Database
Cardinality of the Book Database
- We're looking at how:
- 1-to-1: One row in table A relates to one row in table B
- 1-to-N: One row in table A relates to many rows in table B
- N-to-N: Many rows in table A relate to many rows in table B
The Book Database so Far
Here are the four tables so far and the properties to consider.
They all have primary keys (PK).
What of their foreign keys (FK)?
- Authors Table Properties:
- AuthorID (PK)
- Name
- Address
- Phone
- Books Table Properties:
- BookID (PK)
- Name
- Price
- Date
- Publishers Table Properties:
- PublisherID (PK)
- Name
- Address
- Editors Table Properties:
- EditorID (PK)
- Name
- Address
- Contact
Implementation of 1-to-N Relationships
How would you enter multiple books for the same publisher?
To answer that let's write out some initial data.
BookID |
Name |
Price |
Date |
1 |
Eduardo |
$13 |
02/20/2018 |
2 |
Victoria |
$86 |
11/22/2016 |
3 |
Sapiens |
$20.99 |
02/15/2015 |
PublisherID |
Name |
Address |
BookID |
1 |
Random House |
NY, NY |
1 |
1 |
Random House |
NY, NY |
2 |
1 |
Random House |
NY, NY |
3 |
Note how because of the 1-to-N relationship between books and publishers,
while there's three unique book rows in the Books table,
There's three repeating rows in the Publishers table with
the only difference being the BookID.
This is how this 1-to-N relations play out,
the many table that's related to the 1 in this relationship
must have a lot of repeated information to express that
many books are related to one publisher.
This violates some of the key rules of database design.
Namely that you can't have repeat PKs and
you do not want to put multiple values in one cell.
Instead we would rather have multiple FKs per one PK in one table cell.
Better Approach to Implementing 1-to-N Relationships
Instead of putting the BookID
in the Publisher
table like above,
let's sketch out the implications of
only putting the FK for PublisherID
into the Books
table.
PublisherID |
Name |
Address |
1 |
Random House |
NY, NY |
BookID |
Name |
Price |
Date |
PublisherID |
1 |
Eduardo |
$13 |
02/20/2018 |
1 |
2 |
Victoria |
$9.86 |
11/22/2016 |
1 |
3 |
Sapiens |
$20.99 |
02/15/2015 |
1 |
Note how because the one PublisherID
is tied to many BookID
s,
placing the FK PublisherID
in the Books
table deduplicates the data.
And all without destroying any information.
It will also be more performant because the amount of repition is much less.
Cardinality for Sample Database: N-to-N
How would we represent a many to many relationship?
For this example in the Book database system,
we'll look at the Authors
& Books
tables' relationship as (m:m).
For Many-to-Many relationships,
there's no good way to represent the relationship w/o creating an extra table.
This is known as an intermediate table between Books
& Authors
,
known as BookAuthors
that will represent the relationship.
It will hold for each row a BookID
& AuthorID
to represent related Books & Authors.
Notice that the relationship from Authors
to BookAuthors
is (1:m).
Also, that Books
to BookAuthors
is (1:m).
So that we use that intermediate table to map the two relationships.
Some Observations about Intermediate Tables
- It is an N-to-N relationship
- It is a table but not an independent entity
- A join is required to link the two entities
- Also known as:
- Dependent tables as opposed to the Independent tables representing entities
- Mapping tables as in it maps one entity to another
- Associations
- Join Tables
- The participants in an association are the FKs that map to PKs
- All N-to-N relations need a mapping table
Cardinality for Sample Database: 1-to-1
- Mapping of one row to a row in another table...
- Essentially a continuation of the same table
- They can be collapsed into one table
- There are instances where they can remain as seperate tables
- Capturing all the info into a data model
- Making the main table lightweight
- This might be bc the data within the row is quite heavy
More Info on Cardinality
To learn more about the nuances of cardinality,
consider reading this article
Normalization
Many of the points made about the design of data models
are captured with noramlization rules.
graph TD;
A[Reduction of Redundancy within Tables]
-->B[Simpler Data by Avoiding Duplication]
B --> C[Non-Loss Decomposition]
We do not want redundant data within the tables,
we want to support and improve integrity by avoiding duplicates.
The other thing is to split up concerns without losing data by
using non-loss decomposition.
First Normal Form
Each Row and Column Cell has only One Value
How might you handle one order with multiple books?
We have a Books
table & Orders
table.
How would you handle that relationship without
breaking this normalization rule?
A naive reaction might be to simply add more Book
columns in the Order
table.
You could also add multiple Books
in one cell.
You can tell this isn't a good solution because
it immediately breaks this normal form.
Second Normal Form
Every non-key must be dependent on the primary key
That is that the key truly is a primary key,
even when it is composed of two columns.
Irrelevant when the primary key is the only column of a table.
Ie, every royalty in BookAuthors
depends on Books
& Authors
Table BookAuthors Example
The royalty
column is the only non-key of the table.
It depends entirely on the primary key BookID
in this table.
It makes sense due to the relation of Book
& Author
.
Only one royalty amount would be related to one association of
Book
& Author
.
Third Normal Form
Every non-key must not depend on another non-key column
That is,
there aren't any connections between dependent data columns.
Only independent data may connect others.
Think of each non-key column as a fact about the primary key.
In the Orders
table, Book
s can be multiple than an incomplete fact.
Mini Lesson 4.1: Normalization
The [mini lesson 4.1][pcde-mod4-content-zk] handles the nuances of normalization forms.
References
Web Links
Note Links
- [PCDE Module 4: Mini Lesson 4.1 on Normalization][pcde-mod4-content-zk]
[pcde-mod4-content-zk]: ./pcde-module4-content.md#Mini Lesson 4.1: Normalization "PCDE Module 4: Mini Lesson 4.1 on Normalization"