Module5 Relational Database Design
Module5 Relational Database Design
Normalization
o Normalization is a step by step decomposition of complex records into simple
record.
o Normalization is the process of organizing the data in the database.
o Normalization is used to minimize the redundancy from a relation or set of relations. It is
also used to eliminate undesirable characteristics like Insertion, Update, and Deletion
Anomalies.
o Normalization divides the larger table into smaller and links them using relationships.
o The normal form is used to reduce redundancy from the database table.
o Normalization is a process of designing a consistent database by minimizing redundancy
and ensuring data integrity through decomposition which is lossless.
o Goals of database normalization:
Functional Dependency
A functional dependency is a constraint that specifies the relationship
between two sets of attributes where one set can accurately determine the
value of other sets.
It is denoted as X → Y, where X is a set of attributes that is capable of
determining the value of Y.
The attribute set on the left side of the arrow,
X is called Determinant, while on the right side,
Y is called the Dependent. Functional dependencies are used to
mathematically express relations among database entities and are very
important to understand advanced concepts in Relational Database
System and understanding problems in competitive exams like Gate.
For example:
Assume we have an employee table with attributes: Emp_Id, Emp_Name, Salary, Project_Id,
Hours, Allowance.
CASE 1: (X→Y)
Here Emp_Id attribute can uniquely identify the Emp_Name attribute of employee table
because if we know the Emp_Id, we can tell that employee name associated with it.
Emp_Id → Emp_Name
AS per Above Employee table, it can be possible to have multiple employees with same
Ename and salary.
CASE 3: (XY→ZW)
AS per Above Employee table, it can be possible to have multiple Emp_Id and Project_Id
pairs with same values of Hours and Allowance.
1 1 540
2 1 545
1 2 200
2 2 201
1 1 540
2 2 201
3 1 542
From the table, we can clearly see that neither supplier_id or item_id can uniquely determine
the price but both supplier_id and item_id together can do so. So we can say that price is fully
functionally dependent on { supplier_id, item_id }. This summarizes and gives our fully
functional dependency −
{ supplier_id , item_id } -> price
Ravi 2 DBMS
Tim 3 OS
John 5 Java
Here, we can see that both the attributes name and roll_no alone are able to uniquely identify
a course. Hence we can say that the relationship is partially dependent.
42 Abc 17
43 Pqr 18
44 Xyz 18
In Multivalued functional dependency, entities of the dependent set are not dependent on
each other.
i.e. If a → {b, c} and there exists no functional dependency between b and c, then it is called
a multivalued functional dependency.
For example,
42 Abc 17
43 Pqr 18
44 Xyz 18
45 Abc 19
42 Abc CO 4
43 Pqr EC 2
44 Xyz IT 1
45 Abc EC 2
FD Properties
1. Primary Properties
2. Secondary Properties
Relational Decomposition
o When a relation in the relational model is not in appropriate normal form then the
decomposition of a relation is required.
o In a database, it breaks the table into multiple tables.
o If the relation has no proper decomposition, then it may lead to problems like loss of
information.
o Decomposition is used to eliminate some of the problems of bad design like anomalies,
inconsistencies, and redundancy.
Types of Decomposition
Lossless Decomposition
Dependency Preserving
No Repetition of information
Lossless Decomposition
o If the information is not lost from the relation that is decomposed, then the decomposition
will be lossless.
o The lossless decomposition guarantees that the join of relations will result in the same
relation as it was decomposed.
o The relation is said to be lossless decomposition if natural joins of all the decomposition
give the original relation.
Example:
EMPLOYEE_DEPARTMENT table:
The above relation is decomposed into two relations EMPLOYEE and DEPARTMENT
EMPLOYEE table:
22 Denim 28 Mumbai
33 Alina 25 Delhi
46 Stephan 30 Bangalore
52 Katherine 36 Mumbai
60 Jack 40 Noida
DEPARTMENT table
827 22 Sales
438 33 Marketing
869 46 Finance
575 52 Production
678 60 Testing
Now, when these two relations are joined on the common column "EMP_ID", then the
resultant relation will look like:
Employee ⋈ Department
Dependency Preserving
o It is an important constraint of the database.
o In the dependency preservation, at least one decomposed table must satisfy every
dependency.
o If a relation R is decomposed into relation R1 and R2, then the dependencies of R either
must be a part of R1 or R2 or must be derivable from the combination of functional
dependencies of R1 and R2.
o For example, suppose there is a relation R (A, B, C, D) with functional dependency set (A-
>BC). The relational R is decomposed into R1(ABC) and R2(AD) which is dependency
preserving because FD A->BC is a part of relation R1(ABC).
No Repetition of Information
o Lack of Data Redundancy is also known as a Repetition of Information.
o The proper decomposition should not suffer from any data redundancy.
o The careless decomposition may cause a problem with the data.
o The lack of data redundancy property may be achieved by Normalization process.
Normalization
o Normalization is the process of organizing the data in the database.
o Normalization is used to minimize the redundancy from a relation or set of relations. It is
also used to eliminate undesirable characteristics like Insertion, Update, and Deletion
Anomalies.
o Normalization divides the larger table into smaller and links them using relationships.
o The normal form is used to reduce redundancy from the database table.
Normal Description
Form
2NF A relation will be in 2NF if it is in 1NF and all non-key attributes are fully
functional dependent on the primary key.
4NF A relation will be in 4NF if it is in Boyce Codd's normal form and has no multi-
valued dependency.
First Normal Form (1NF)
o A relation will be 1NF if it contains an atomic value.
o It states that an attribute of a table cannot hold multiple values. It must hold only single-
valued attribute.
o First normal form disallows the multi-valued attribute, composite attribute, and their
combinations.
EMPLOYEE table:
14 John 7272826385, UP
9064738238
The decomposition of the EMPLOYEE table into 1NF has been shown below:
14 John 7272826385 UP
14 John 9064738238 UP
TEACHER table
25 Chemistry 30
25 Biology 30
47 English 35
83 Math 38
83 Computer 38
TEACHER_DETAIL table:
TEACHER_ID TEACHER_AGE
25 30
47 35
83 38
TEACHER_SUBJECT table:
TEACHER_ID SUBJECT
25 Chemistry
25 Biology
47 English
83 Math
83 Computer
A relation is in third normal form if it holds atleast one of the following conditions for
every non-trivial function dependency X → Y.
1. X is a super key.
2. Y is a prime attribute, i.e., each element of Y is part of some candidate key.
Example:
EMPLOYEE_DETAIL table:
Non-prime attributes: In the given table, all attributes except EMP_ID are non-
prime.
That's why we need to move the EMP_CITY and EMP_STATE to the new
<EMPLOYEE_ZIP> table, with EMP_ZIP as a Primary key.
EMPLOYEE table:
EMPLOYEE_ZIP table:
201010 UP Noida
02228 US Boston
60007 US Chicago
06389 UK Norwich
462007 MP Bhopal
Example: Let's assume there is a company where employees work in more than one
department.
EMPLOYEE table:
1. EMP_ID → EMP_COUNTRY
2. EMP_DEPT → {DEPT_TYPE, EMP_DEPT_NO}
69.7M
1.4K
The table is not in BCNF because neither EMP_DEPT nor EMP_ID alone are keys.
To convert the given table into BCNF, we decompose it into three tables:
EMP_COUNTRY table:
EMP_ID EMP_COUNTRY
264 India
264 India
EMP_DEPT table:
EMP_DEPT_MAPPING table:
EMP_ID EMP_DEPT
D394 283
D394 300
D283 232
D283 549
Functional dependencies:
1. EMP_ID → EMP_COUNTRY
2. EMP_DEPT → {DEPT_TYPE, EMP_DEPT_NO}
Candidate keys:
For the first table: EMP_ID
For the second table: EMP_DEPT
For the third table: {EMP_ID, EMP_DEPT}
21 Computer Dancing
21 Math Singing
34 Chemistry Dancing
74 Biology Cricket
59 Physics Hockey
The given STUDENT table is in 3NF, but the COURSE and HOBBY are two independent
entity. Hence, there is no relationship between COURSE and HOBBY.
So to make the above table into 4NF, we can decompose it into two tables:
STUDENT_COURSE
STU_ID COURSE
21 Computer
21 Math
34 Chemistry
74 Biology
59 Physics
STUDENT_HOBBY
STU_ID HOBBY
21 Dancing
21 Singing
34 Dancing
74 Cricket
59 Hockey
Advantages of Normalization
o Normalization helps to minimize data redundancy.
o Greater overall database organization.
o Data consistency within the database.
o Much more flexible database design.
o Enforces the concept of relational integrity.
Disadvantages of Normalization
o You cannot start building the database before knowing what the user needs.
o The performance degrades when normalizing the relations to higher normal forms, i.e.,
4NF, 5NF.
o It is very time-consuming and difficult to normalize relations of a higher degree.
o Careless decomposition may lead to a bad database design, leading to serious problems.