This book explains SQL very clearly indeed, as the title implies. I knew a bit of SQL before I started reading this book, so the first 50-odd pages didn't teach me much, but they still made me understand a few things here and there more thoroughly. I got my copy yesterday, and I'm at around page 10
Relational Database Design Clearly Explained, Second Edition (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems)
โ Scribed by Jan L. Harrington
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 412
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Fully revised and updated, Relational Database Design, Second Edition is the most lucid and effective introduction to relational database design available. Here, you'll find the conceptual and practical information you need to develop a design that ensures data accuracy and user satisfaction while optimizing performance, regardless of your experience level or choice of DBMS.Supporting the book's step-by-step instruction are three case studies illustrating the planning, analysis, and design steps involved in arriving at a sound design. These real-world examples include object-relational design techniques, which are addressed in greater detail in a new chapter devoted entirely to this timely subject. * Concepts you need to master to put the book's practical instruction to work. Methods for tailoring your design to the environment in which the database will run and the uses to which it will be put. Design approaches that ensure data accuracy and consistency. Examples of how design can inhibit or boost database application performance. Object-relational design techniques, benefits, and examples. Instructions on how to choose and use a normalization technique. Guidelines for understanding and applying Codd's rules. Tools to implement a relational design using SQL. Techniques for using CASE tools for database design.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is a pretty good book for a beginner, someone who's seeing SQL (or any other database-related language) for the first time. It's good, but a bit to simplistic for anyone who's actively worked with databases. Good starting point, though.
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