What are Data Models? Type of Data Models.
What
are Data Models? Type of Data Models.
A
model is a representation of reality, 'real world' objects and events, associations.
It is an abstraction that concentrates on the essential, inherent aspects an
organization and ignores the accidental properties. A data model represents the
organization itself. It should provide the basic concepts and notations that
will allow database designers and end users unambiguously and accurately to
communicate their understanding of the organizational data.
Data
Model can be defined as an integrated collection of concepts for describing and
manipulating data, relationships between data, and constraints on the data in
an organization.
A
data model comprises of three components:
•
A structural part, consisting of a set of rules according to which databases
can be constructed.
•
A manipulative part, defining the types of operation that are allowed on the
data (this includes the operations that are used for updating or retrieving
data from the database and for changing the structure of the database).
•
Possibly a set of integrity rules, which ensures that the data is accurate.
The
purpose of a data model is to represent data and to make the data
understandable. There have been many data models proposed in the literature.
They fall into three broad categories:
·
Object Based Data Models
·
Physical Data Models
·
Record Based Data Models
The
object based and record based data models are used to describe data at the
conceptual and external levels, the physical data model is used to· describe
data at the internal level.
Object Based Data Models
Object
based data models use concepts such as entities, attributes, and relationships.
An entity is a distinct object (a person, place, concept, and event) in the
organization that is to be represented in the database. An attribute is a
property that describes some aspect of the object that we wish to record, and a
relationship is an association between entities.
Some
of the more common types of object based data model are:
•
Entity-Relationship
•
Object Oriented
•
Semantic
•
Functional
The
Entity-Relationship model has emerged as one of the main techniques for
modeling database design and forms the basis for the database design
methodology. The object oriented data model extends the definition of an entity
to include, not only the attributes that describe the state of the object but
also the actions that are associated with the object, that is, its behavior.
The object is said to encapsulate both state and behavior. Entities in semantic
systems represent the equivalent of a record in a relational system or an
object in an OO system but they do not include behavior (methods). They are
abstractions 'used to represent real world (e.g. customer) or conceptual (e.g.
bank account) objects. The functional data model is now almost twenty years
old. The original idea was to' view the database as a collection of sensationally defined functions and to use a functional language for querying the database.
Physical Data Models
Physical
data models describe how data is stored in the computer,
representing information such as record structures, record ordering,
and access paths. There are not as many physical data models as logical data
models, the most common one being the Unifying Model.
Record Based Logical Models
Record
based logical models are used in describing data at the logical and view
levels. In contrast to object based data models, they are used to specify the
overall logical structure of the database and to provide a higher-level
description of the implementation. Record based models are so named because the
database is structured in fixed format records of several types. Each record
type defines a fixed number of fields, or attributes, and each field is usually
of a fixed length.
The
three most widely accepted record based data models are:
•
Hierarchical Model
•
Network Model
•
Relational Model
The
relational model has gained favor over the other two in recent years. The
network and hierarchical models are still used in a large number of older
databases.
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