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fge
fge
23:00
Stop right there
What do you think R means in RDBMS?
Relations, and that's what I removed
fge
fge
No
There was only one relation between employee and position. So I removed the table and the column in the table relating employee to position
fge
fge
No, no, no, no, NO
O.o
Please, do tell me then
fge
fge
23:07
A relation in the relational model describes how the tuples {type, value} of a particular ROW are RELATED to each other
THAT is a relation
Well, change what I said to reference then
fge
fge
THAT is what the relational model is about
NO
Again read what I've just said
What are Foreign Keys if not references?
fge
fge
They are references, yes, but they ARE NOT a RELATION
Yes, You taught me that just now!
fge
fge
23:09
I DO hope that your teacher(s) didn't tell you that
Noone told me anything, I just assumed that it was also called relation when you were referencing another table in a column
fge
fge
Well, no
That is not what a relation is
Yes, I get that now
fge
fge
Not in the relational model
And that should be the BASE of ANY course about an RDBMS
So let's not dig deeper into it
I fixed my schema
fge
fge
23:10
The definitions of 1NF, 2NF and 3NF are all about relations
And decided to change referencing to the user instead of straight to an employee
fge
fge
Forget about your particular case for a moment and ponder what I just said
@fge Yes, thus I said I assumed it was also called relation when you referenced other tables
fge
fge
And recall what a relation really is
No, it is NOT
Calling such a link a relation as a relation is defined in the relational model is a FUNDAMENTAL MISTAKE
Get that out of your head NOW
I got that out of my head here:
8 mins ago, by fge
A relation in the relational model describes how the tuples {type, value} of a particular ROW are RELATED to each other
As I said, I thought it extended to the concept of referring to other tables as well. But it doesn't so thank you for pointing it out, now let's continue!
The thing pf the most importance when it comes to the schema is that it follows 3NF, I will FAIL if it doesn't
How good my teachers are at detecting fails though is an entirely different question
fge
fge
23:28
Well, I'll cover *NF this weekend for sure
OK, given the time we won't have any code produced so let's get a little more into the theory
The relational model does not only define a relation as I described
It also defines constraints
I'm gonna be up all night so that's fine with me :P
fge
fge
Now, have you ever heard of Peano algebra?
Ping?
Yes
But you know, what I need you do do right now is to look at my schema and see if the tables are following 3NF, if not, THEN you can teach me more about it, if they ARE 3NF then I do kinda understand it.
If it's ok that I say that
fge
fge
Not so fast
You can do whatever you want, I'll accept it
I just feel like we're wasting time if you're gonna retell me what I spent the last 3 weeks reading
fge
fge
23:35
As to this particular matter I have already given you all the elements ;) I'll fix your schema later but I'll ask you for the URL again
Well, I believe it won't be a waste of time so please hear me out ;)
Well, I was hoping I could get to the part of populating the database :/
@fge Alright :)
fge
fge
At 00:35am? :p
OK, so, a relation is basically a set of tuples, and a tuple associates a domain with a value; for instance, { string, "hello" }
Or even, { integer: 1 }
So, let us take a simple table which has two columns, "id" and "value"; "id" is just a name for a tuple and it happens that this tuple's domain is integer; as to "value", it is also just a name and this tuple's domain is string
Now, and this is where it gets interesting
What is a primary key? After all, "id" is just a name for a tuple, right?
Do you follow so far?
Well, the primary key is a constraint that says that the value can only occur once in the entire column
fge
fge
Yes, that's true, and another constraint is that it cannot be the null value
fge
fge
23:41
Using the peano algebra, you can express it, and that's the other important part of the relational model: constraints
yes
But, here's the reason to WHY I thought referring to other tables is also a relational thing. One constraint is the Foreign Key, which ties a table to another
or specifically a column to another
if it's of any interest that that's how I made the connection and thought referring was a part of the relation in RDBMS
fge
fge
A primary key is defined as such: "given a relation R (that is, a table), given a tuple T of that relation (that is, a column), given two instances r1, r2 of that relation (that is, two rows of that table) then it is always true that T(r1) is not null, T(r2) is not null and T(r1) is different from T(r2)"
As to foreign keys, as I'll explain soon, it is also such a constraint :)
But given the definition above, T is a primary key
That is, a particular column (tuple) of a table (relation) acts as a primary key BECAUSE it obeys the above constraint
OK so far?
fge
fge
Now, the important thing to keep in mind is that this constraint is MATHEMATICALLY DEFINED, and provable
fge
fge
23:55
And that is the strength of the relational model
Ok :)
fge
fge
This is why you can reliably derive new truths from the truths stored in your tables/relations
Now, let's see how to define a foreign key as a constraint ;)

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