Modern Database Management
13th Edition
ISBN: 9780134773650
Author: Hoffer
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 2, Problem 2.43PAE
Program Plan Intro
Redraw the given figure 2-4a for the revised situation described as follows:
Consider a slightlydifferent situation. Suppose it is necessary, for compliancepurposes (e.g., Sarbanes-Oxley compliance), to know when each expense report was produced and which officers(not just the treasurer) received each expense report and when each signed off on that report.
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b. Draw an Entity Relationship diagram from each of the following descriptions. Include the attributes, primary keys (underlines) and the relationships in the diagram (like relationship in Access).
i. Each of the department has many employees assigned to it, but each employee works for only one department.
if. A customer can rent many videotapes from the video store. Each of the videotapes can be rented to many customers.
PLZ help with the following:
Create a Crow’s Foot ERD. Draw YOUR entity relationship diagram (ERD) to indicate entities, relationships, connectives, and resolve M:N relationships.
For the following:
The faculty and students (we refer to them in our system as clients) can electronically check out any book at any time. A book must have at least one author but can have more authors. An author must have written at least one book or more to be included in the system. A book may have neverbeen checked out, but can be checked out many times by the same client or different clients over time. A client may have never checked out a book or they may have checked out many books over time. To simplify determining which client currently has a given book checked out, a M:N relationship between BOOK and CLIENT should be maintained. The information recorded for each book is book number, book title, book subject, and year of publication.
For each author, the library records the author ID,…
To manage the materials of a factory, please give the E-R diagrams.
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Warehouse: with attributes as Number, area and telephone
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Chapter 2 Solutions
Modern Database Management
Ch. 2 - Define each of the following terms: entity type...Ch. 2 - Match the following terms and definitions....Ch. 2 - Contrast the following terms: stored attribute;...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.4RQCh. 2 - Prob. 2.5RQCh. 2 - Prob. 2.6RQCh. 2 - State six general guidelines for naming data...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.8RQCh. 2 - Prob. 2.9RQCh. 2 - State three conditions that suggest the designer...
Ch. 2 - List the four types of cardinality constraints,...Ch. 2 - Give an example, Other than those described in...Ch. 2 - What is the degree of a relationship? List the...Ch. 2 - Give an example (Other than those described in...Ch. 2 - Give an example of each of the following, other...Ch. 2 - Give an example of the use of effective (or...Ch. 2 - State a rule that says when to extract an...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.18RQCh. 2 - In addition to explaining what action is being...Ch. 2 - For the Manages relationship in Figure 2-12a,...Ch. 2 - Explain the distinction between entity type and...Ch. 2 - Why is it recommended that every ternary...Ch. 2 - A cellular operator needs a database to keep track...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.24PAECh. 2 - Answer the following questions concerning Figure...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.26PAECh. 2 - You may have been assigned a CASE or a drawing...Ch. 2 - Consider the two E-R diagrams in Figure 2-25 Q,...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.29PAECh. 2 - Are associative entities also weak entities? Why...Ch. 2 - Because Visio does not explicitly show associative...Ch. 2 - Figure 2-26 shows a grade report that is mailed to...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.33PAECh. 2 - The Is Married To relationship in Figure 2-12a...Ch. 2 - Figure 2-27 represents a situation of students who...Ch. 2 - Figure 2-28 shows two diagrams (A and B), both of...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.37PAECh. 2 - Review Figure 2-8LQ and Figure 2-22. Identify any...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.39PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.40PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.41PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.42PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.43PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.44PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.45PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.46PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.47PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.48PAECh. 2 - Draw an ERD for the following situation. (State...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.50PAECh. 2 - Prob. 2.51PAECh. 2 - Review your answer to Problem and Exercise 2-49 if...
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- For each of the following pairs of related entities, indicate whether (under typical circumstances) there is a one-tomany or a many-to-many relationship. Then, using the shorthand notation introduced in the text, draw a diagram for each of the relationships.a. STUDENT and COURSE (students register for courses)b. BOOK and BOOK COPY (books have copies)c. COURSE and SECTION (courses have sections)d. SECTION and ROOM (sections are scheduled in rooms)e. INSTRUCTOR and COURSEarrow_forwardSuppose that we wish to keep a genealogy. The information we wish to record about each person includes their name, date of birth, phone number, and degrees obtained . We also need to keep track of the mother, father, and children of each person. Draw a complete Entity-Relationship diagram. You must include all the details, sad as keys, weak entities (if any), cardinality constraints, etc. Your diagram must avoid redundancy.arrow_forwarddraw Entity Relationship Diagram (ERD) for scenairo: “There is a group of employees who have run the website. Three admins are responsible to check registration forms filled by babysitters. An accountant is responsible to check fees payments. All these employees are supervised by the manager. Each babysitter can register on the website one time by filling in her data including first and last names, qualifications, fee rate per hour (25 SAR per Hour), contact information, address, photo, and years of experience. The system will issue for her id and registration date. Mothers can make booking as many as they need. For each time, they must fill in their names, contact information, address, number of children, the date and time (e.g. from 2:00 PM to 4:PM) of booking. The website will generate the booking report including mother’s data, babysitter’s contact data, number of booked hours, fee rate per hour, fees total amount, and tax (%5). To make a payment, the mother needs the…arrow_forward
- Applying your knowledge in Enhanced Entity Relationship modeling, Develop an EER model for the following situation: A person may be employed by one or more organizations and each organization may be the employer of one or more persons. An organization can be internal organizational unit or an external organization. For persons and organizations, we want to know their ID, name, address and phone number. For persons we want to know their birthdate, and for organizations, we want to know their budget number. For each 6 employment, we want to know the employment date, termination date and bonus. Employment of a person by an organization may result in the person holding many positions over time. For each position, we know its title, and each time someone holds that position, we need to know the start date and termination date and salary. An organization is responsible for each position. It is possible for a person to be employed by one organization and hold a position for which another…arrow_forwardUse ER Assistant to draw your diagram. Draw a self-referencing entity type for the Employee entity type for which an employee is supervised by a maximum of one other employee and doesn’t have to be supervised by any employee at all. Conversely, an employee can supervise zero or many other employees. The attributes of the Employee entity are as follows: EmpNo (primary key), EmpName, EmpAddress.arrow_forwardWe need to first make some adjustments to certain variables in Tableau and better understand the difference between Dimensions and Measures. Dimensions (shown as blue variable names) are normally attributes about certain transactions that can't be summed or otherwise quantified (e.g., dates, product numbers, invoice numbers, etc.), Measures (shown in green variable names), on the other hand, are normally the outcome variables we are most interested in (e.g., invoice total, quantity shipped, etc.). Sometimes, Tableau misclassifies these variables and we need to make changes before we can continue. In the shipping file, Tableau has classified Customer No. and Invoice No. as Measures instead of Dimensions. We need to set both of these as dimensions. • Right-click on Customer Number and press "Convert to Dimension." • Repeat the previous step for Invoice Number. What other "number" has been imported as a Measure instead of a Dimension? Please change it to a Measure Dimension using the…arrow_forward
- draw an E-R diagram that indicates the entity sets and their attributes. Identify and label significant relationship sets between pairs of entities, the degree of relationship sets and the cardinality and participation constraints.arrow_forwardDraw the associations that are described by the following business rules. Include the multiplicities for each relationship. (4 marks) A patient must be assigned to only one doctor, and a doctor can have one or many patient: An employee has one phone extension, and a unique phone extension is assigned to an employee. A bookstore sells at least one book, and a book can be sold at up to 10 other bookstores around town.arrow_forwardDraw an ERD for the following problem:Company organized into departments. Each department has unique, name and a particular employee who manages the department. Start date for the manager is recorded. Department may have several locations. A department controls a number of projects. Projects have a unique name, number and a single location. Company’s employees name, ssno, address, salary, sex and birth date are recorded. An employee is assigned to one department, but may work for several projects (not necessarily controlled by her dept). Number of hours/week an employee works on each project is recorded; the immediate Supervisor for the employee. Employee’s dependents are tracked for health insurance purposes (dependent name, birthdate, relationship to employee).arrow_forward
- Draw an ER diagram that captures the following information: A book identified by (unique Id number, a title and one or more authors), A library identified by (unique name and adders), A borrower has a name and a unique ID code. The library service may own several copies of a given book. A borrower can have many books on loan, but each copy of a book can only be on loan to one borrower. A borrower could borrow the same book on several occasions, but it is assumed that each such loan will take place on a different date. *arrow_forwardERD must be considered : One to one One to many . . . etc; And Simple,Composite,Derived,Single(Attribute) Thanksarrow_forwardQuestion: a) Draw the entity relationship diagram for each of the following Scenario. i) The company has over 100 employees. Each employee is identified by their Employee_ID. Other attributes are Employee_Name, EmployeeAddress, and Skills. An employee may have more than one skill. And each skill can be mastered by many employees or none. ii) A customer can submit orders to buy products. Each order is identified by Order_ID, and Order_Date. A customer may submit any number of orders. Each order is submitted by exactly one customer. The identifier for a customer is Customer_ID. Other attributes include Customer_Name and Customer_Addressarrow_forward
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