Associative Entities
A relationship cannot have attributesWhat happens when one or more
attributes exist for a relationship?Employee – Project – Billing Rate
Associative Entities
An associative entity is an entity type that associates the instances of more or more entity types and contains attributes that are specific to the relationship between those entity instances.
Converting a relationship to an associative entity
ExampleEmployee’s billing rate can vary by project
(employee to project, many-to-many)
Employee
ProjectBillingRate
Example:
Attribute of the relationship between property and owner is percent owned
Owner Property%Owned
Ternary Relationship
simultaneous relationship among one instance from each of exactly three entity setsAn associative entity is not required but is
typical.
Ternary Relationships – Cardinality
“one” – one instance of an entity is associated with each unique pair of the other two entities.
“many” – more than one instance of an entity is associated with each unique pair from each of the other two entities.
Example(one-to-one-to-one):
Employee is assigned a phone number for a project. A phone number is used only for that employee and project.
Example (one-to-one-to-one):
Employee
Project
PhoneNumber
Has
Note: An employee could still be assigned to multiple projects but would have a unique phone number for each project assignment.
Example(one-to-one-to-many):
Employee assigned to a project works at one location for that project but can work at different locations for different projects. At a location an employee only works on one project, but there can be many employees working on that same project.
Example(one-to-one-to-many):
Employee
Project
Location
Has
Example(one-to-many-to-many):
Employee on a project has one manager. Manager can manage several projects. Each project has one manager. Manager can manage the same employee on different projects.
Example(one-to-many-to-many):
Employee
Project
Manager
Has
Example(many-to-many-to-many):
Employees use many skills on many projects and each project has many employees with varying skills.
Example(many-to-many-to-many):
Employee
Project
Skill
Has
Ternary Relationships
Why not just make the ternary relationship an associative entity?
Employee
ProjectLocation
Good idea if possible. However,
“Business Rules”Need for separate (strong) entityWhat if location also related to other
entities?No longer valid as associative entity
If you can safely get rid of ternary (or n-ary) relationships, DO IT.However, don’t trade correctness for ease of implementation.
Example:
Employee assigned to a project works at one location and is only assigned to one project. However, projects can be at more than one location and have multiple employees working on them at each location. Multiple projects can be at the same location.
Draw the E-R Diagram.
Example:
Now, suppose employees have a billing rate that varies with both project and location.
Update your E-R Diagram.
Generalization/Specialization
Generalization: Defining a general entity type from a set of more specialized ones (bottom-up).
Specialization: Defining one or more specialized entities from a more general one based on distinguishing characteristics (top-down).
Examples:
Generalization: Bank account generalized from checking, savings, and loan.
Specialization: Property for sale divided into single family, duplex, apartment, commercial, or industrial.
Why use generalization or specialization?
clarity more fully describe situation conversion to OO (inheritance) different relationships only apply to specific subtypes
monthly charges only made to checking accounts
different relationships only apply to the supertype customer must have an account with the bank
different (additional) attributes for the subtypes
Generalization/Specialization
Applies to entities onlyTypes:
disjoint – can be only one subtypeoverlapping – can be more than one
subtype
Completeness Constraint – subtypes fully inclusive of supertype
Generalization/Specialization
Disjoint – student can be undergraduate, masters, or doctoral
Overlapping – major can be history, philosophy, or mathematics
Example
A company sells products whose price can change at most once a day. Need to be able to track the price history.
Multivalued Attribute
Product ID
Description
Effective Date
Price
Price History
Product Type
Product
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