Hands-On Technology Transfer
presents
Relational Database Design Concepts On-Site Training
This relational database design class develops relational database design skills and techniques
Course Description/Agenda
Students Will Learn:
- Building a Logical Data Model
- Entity-Relationship Diagrams
- Data Normalization Forms
- SQL Statement Syntax
- Manipulating Query Results
- Designing for Performance
- Table Indexing
Course Description: This relational database design class
develops relational database design skills and techniques. Practical
methodologies such as E-R diagrams and normalization forms are emphasized.
Attention is placed on designing for data integrity and efficiency at the same
time. During hands on lab sessions students are required to design multiple
database models from business requirements and specifications. Through hands on
experience using SQL programming code to create, populate and manage relational
tables, students will experience the necessity of proper design methods and gain
an in depth understanding of the link between design, creation, and utilization.
The impact of alternative designs on maintainability and database performance is
emphasized.
Course Prerequisites: General computer knowledge.
Familiarity with relational database concepts is helpful but not required.
Relational Database Design Concepts Course Overview:
Developing Relational Databases
- Relational Database Fundamentals
- Database Development Methodology Overview
Transforming to Physical Design
- Migrating Entities to Tables
- Selecting Primary Keys
- Defining Columns
- Enforcing Relationships with Foreign Keys
- Enforcing Business Rules
- NOT NULL, UNIQUE and CHECK Constraints
- Assigning DEFAULT Values
- DELETE and UPDATE Rules
- Database VIEWs
- Designing for Security: Users and Roles
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Building a Logical Data Model
- Understanding Data Analysis and Modeling
- Identifying Entities and Attributes
- Isolating Keys
- Relationships between Entities (One-to-One, One-to-Many,
Many-to-Many)
- Creating Entity-Relationship Diagrams
- Complex Modeling Issues
- Exclusive and Recursive Relationships
- Normalization as a Design Technique
- Progressive Steps to Normalization (First, Second, and Third
Normal Form)
- Higher Levels of Normalization
- Using Normalization to Build an E-R Diagram
- Referential Integrity Enforcement and Implications
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Designing for Performance
- Indexing
- Denormalization
- Addressing Data Contention
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Populating the Database
- Creating and Manipulating Data
- INSERT
- UPDATE
- DELETE
- TRUNCATE
- Controlling transactions
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Constructing the Database
- Creating the Database Objects
- The Schema
- Creating Tables, Indexes, Constraints and Views
- Creating Roles and GRANTing Privileges
- Managing Database Objects
- Dropping Tables, Indexes and Views
- Revoking Privileges
- ALTERing Tables, Indexes and Views
- Enabling and Disabling Constraints
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Basic SQL Queries
- Displaying Table Structures
- SELECTing Column Data From a Table or View
- SELECT DISTINCT Values
- COUNTing Rows
- Restricting Rows Using the WHERE Clause
- Using Operators
- Logical
- Mathematical
- Comparison
- Concatenation
- Sorting Results Using ORDER BY
- Joining Multiple Tables
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Manipulating and Summarizing Results
- Using Row Functions
- Using Column Functions
- Handling NULLs
- Aggregating Results Using GROUP BY
- Restricting Groups with the HAVING Clause
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Advanced Query Techniques
- Outer Joins
- Set processing: UNION, EXCEPT/MINUS and INTERSECT
- Grouping, Filtering and Sorting Query Results
- Subqueries
- Tips for Developing Complex SQL Queries
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