UNIT-6: Schema Refinement (Normalization)
UNIT-6: Schema Refinement (Normalization)
UNIT-6: Schema Refinement (Normalization)
What is Normalization?
Normalization is a method of organizing the data in the database which helps you to avoid data
redundancy, insertion, update & deletion anomaly. It is a process of analyzing the relation
schemas based on their different functional dependencies and primary key.
Normalization is inherent to relational database theory. It may have the effect of duplicating the
same data within the database which may result in the creation of additional tables.
Without Normalization, it becomes difficult to handle and update the database, without facing
data loss. Insertion, Updation and Deletion Anamolies are very frequent if Database is not
Normalized. To understand these anomalies let us take an example of Student table.
Updation Anomaly : To update address of a student who occurs twice or more than
twice in a table, we will have to update S_Address column in all the rows, else data will
become inconsistent.
Insertion Anomaly : Suppose for a new admission, we have a Student id(S_id), name
and address of a student but if student has not opted for any subjects yet then we have
to insert NULLthere, leading to Insertion Anomaly.
Deletion Anomaly : If (S_id) 401 has only one subject and temporarily he drops it, when
we delete that row, entire student record will be deleted along with it.
1
Functional Dependency
What is a functional dependency?
Functional Dependency is when one attribute determines another attribute in a DBMS system.
Functional Dependency plays a vital role to find the difference between good and bad database
design.
Example:
The functional dependency is a relationship that exists between two attributes. It typically exists
between the primary key and non-key attribute within a table.
A functional dependency is denoted by an arrow →
The functional dependency of X on Y is represented by X →Y
The left side of FD is known as a determinant, the right side of the production is known
as a dependent.
Advantages of Functional Dependency
Functional Dependency avoids data redundancy. Therefore same data do not repeat at
multiple locations in that database
It helps you to maintain the quality of data in the database
It helps you to defined meanings and constraints of databases
It helps you to identify bad designs
It helps you to find the facts regarding the database design
Below given are the Three most important rules for Functional Dependency:
2
Transitivity rule: This rule is very much similar to the transitive rule in algebra
if x -> y holds and y -> z holds, then x -> z also holds. X -> y is called as
functionally that determines y.
Multivalued dependency
Trivial functional dependency
Non-trivial functional dependency
Transitive dependency
Multivalued dependency occurs in the situation where there are multiple independent
multivalued attributes in a single table. A multivalued dependency is a complete
constraint between two sets of attributes in a relation. It requires that certain tuples be
present in a relation.
Example:
In this example, maf_year and color are independent of each other but dependent on
car_model. In this example, these two columns are said to be multivalue dependent on
car_model.
car_model-> colour
The Trivial dependency is a set of attributes which are called a trivial if the set of
attributes are included in that attribute.
Emp_id Emp_name
AS555 Harry
AS811 George
AS999 Kevin
Functional dependency which also known as a nontrivial dependency occurs when A->B
holds true where B is not a subset of A. In a relationship, if attribute B is not a subset
of attribute A, then it is considered as a non-trivial dependency.
Example:
(Company} -> {CEO} (if we know the Company, we knows the CEO name)
But CEO is not a subset of Company, and hence it's non-trivial functional dependency.
Transitive dependency:
A transitive is a type of functional dependency which happens when t is indirectly
formed by two functional dependencies.
X -> Z is a transitive dependency if the following three functional dependencies hold
true:
X->Y
Y does not ->X
Y->Z
Example:
4
Google Sundar Pichai 46
Alibaba Jack Ma 54
{Company} -> {CEO} (if we know the compay, we know its CEO's name)
{ Company} -> {Age} should hold, that makes sense because if we know the
company name, we can know his age.
Note: You need to remember that transitive dependency can only occur in a relation of
three or more attributes.
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 normal form and has no
multi-valued dependency.
5NF A relation is in 5NF if it is in 4NF and not contains any join dependency
and joining should be lossless.
5
First Normal Form (1NF)
o A relation will be 1NF if it contains an unique 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.
As per First Normal Form, no two Rows of data must contain repeating group of
information i.e each set of column must have a unique value, such that multiple
columns cannot be used to fetch the same row. Each table should be organized
into rows, and each row should have a primary key that distinguishes it as
unique.
The Primary key is usually a single column, but sometimes more than one
column can be combined to create a single primary key. For example consider a
table which is not in First normal form
EMPLOYEE table:
14 John 7272826385, UP
9064738238
In First Normal Form, any row must not have a column in which more than one value is
saved, like separated with commas. Rather than that, we must separate such data into
multiple rows.
The decomposition of the EMPLOYEE table into 1NF has been shown below:
14 John 7272826385 UP
14 John 9064738238 UP
6
12 Sam 7390372389 Punjab
Example: Let's assume, a school can store the data of teachers and the subjects they
teach. In a school, a teacher can teach more than one subject.
TEACHER table
25 Chemistry 30
25 Biology 30
47 English 35
83 Math 38
83 Computer 38
To convert the given table into 2NF, we decompose it into two tables:
TEACHER_DETAIL table:
TEACHER_ID TEACHER_AGE
25 30
47 35
83 38
7
TEACHER_SUBJECT table:
TEACHER_ID SUBJECT
25 Chemistry
25 Biology
47 English
83 Math
83 Computer
o A relation will be in 3NF if it is in 2NF and not contain any transitive partial
dependency.
o 3NF is used to reduce the data duplication. It is also used to achieve the data
integrity.
o If there is no transitive dependency for non-prime attributes, then the relation
must be in third normal form.
A relation is in third normal form if it holds atleast one of the following conditions for
every non-trivial function dependency X → Y.
X is a super key.
Y is a prime attribute, i.e., each element of Y is part of some candidate key.
Example:
EMPLOYEE_DETAIL table:
8
444 Lan 60007 US Chicago
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
9
60007 US Chicago
06389 UK Norwich
462007 MP Bhopal
surrogate key:
A surrogate key represents an entity that exists in the outside world and modeled
within the database and made visible to the application and the user, or it can
represent an object within the database itself and be invisible to the user and
application. In both cases, the surrogate key is internally generated.
A surrogate key is not always used as a primary key, and this depends on whether the
database is of the current or temporal kind. A current database only stores valid current
data and requires a one-to-one association between the surrogate key in the modeled
world and the primary key of the database, in which case the surrogate may act as the
primary key. However, in a temporal database, there is a many-to-one association
between the primary keys and the surrogate key, which means that there may be
multiple objects within the database that are associated with the surrogate key, so it
cannot be used as a primary key.
10
Example: Let's assume there is a company where employees work in more than one
department.
EMPLOYEE table:
EMP_ID → EMP_COUNTRY
EMP_DEPT → {DEPT_TYPE, EMP_DEPT_NO}
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:
11
EMP_DEPT_MAPPING table:
EMP_ID EMP_DEPT
D394 283
D394 300
D283 232
D283 549
Functional dependencies:
EMP_ID → EMP_COUNTRY
EMP_DEPT → {DEPT_TYPE, EMP_DEPT_NO}
Candidate keys:
Now, this is in BCNF because left side part of both the functional dependencies is a key.
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
12
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
13
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
14
R2(AD) which is dependency preserving because FD A->BC is a part of relation
R1(ABC).
Join Dependency
o Join decomposition is a further generalization of Multivalued dependencies.
o If the join of R1 and R2 over C is equal to relation R, then we can say that a join
dependency (JD) exists.
o Where R1 and R2 are the decompositions R1(A, B, C) and R2(C, D) of a given
relations R (A, B, C, D).
o Alternatively, R1 and R2 are a lossless decomposition of R.
o A JD ⋈ {R1, R2,..., Rn} is said to hold over a relation R if R1, R2,....., Rn is a
lossless-join decomposition.
o The *(A, B, C, D), (C, D) will be a JD of R if the join of join's attribute is equal to
the relation R.
o Here, *(R1, R2, R3) is used to indicate that relation R1, R2, R3 and so on are a
JD of R.
Inclusion Dependency
o Multivalued dependency and join dependency can be used to guide database
design although they both are less common than functional dependencies.
o Inclusion dependencies are quite common. They typically show little influence on
designing of the database.
o The inclusion dependency is a statement in which some columns of a relation are
contained in other columns.
o The example of inclusion dependency is a foreign key. In one relation, the
referring relation is contained in the primary key column(s) of the referenced
relation.
o Suppose we have two relations R and S which was obtained by translating two
entity sets such that every R entity is also an S entity.
o Inclusion dependency would be happen if projecting R on its key attributes yields
a relation that is contained in the relation obtained by projecting S on its key
attributes.
o In inclusion dependency, we should not split groups of attributes that participate
in an inclusion dependency.
o In practice, most inclusion dependencies are key-based that is involved only
keys.
15
Fourth normal form (4NF)
o A relation will be in 4NF if it is in Boyce Codd normal form and has no multi-
valued dependency.
o For a dependency A → B, if for a single value of A, multiple values of B exists,
then the relation will be a multi-valued dependency.
Example
STUDENT
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
16
STUDENT_HOBBY
STU_ID HOBBY
21 Dancing
21 Singing
34 Dancing
74 Cricket
59 Hockey
Example
In the above table, John takes both Computer and Math class for Semester 1 but he
doesn't take Math class for Semester 2. In this case, combination of all these fields
required to identify a valid data.
Suppose we add a new Semester as Semester 3 but do not know about the subject and
who will be taking that subject so we leave Lecturer and Subject as NULL. But all three
columns together acts as a primary key, so we can't leave other two columns blank.
17
So to make the above table into 5NF, we can decompose it into three relations P1, P2 &
P3:
P1
SEMESTER SUBJECT
Semester 1 Computer
Semester 1 Math
Semester 1 Chemistry
Semester 2 Math
P2
SUBJECT LECTURER
Computer Anshika
Computer John
Math John
Math Akash
Chemistry Praveen
P3
SEMSTER LECTURER
Semester 1 Anshika
Semester 1 John
Semester 1 John
Semester 2 Akash
Semester 1 Praveen
18
Difference Betwwen 3NF and BCNF:
3 NF BCNF
1.The database is said to be in 2 NF if AND 1.Database is said to be in BCNF if AND ONLY if
ONLY if it must be 1NF and there is no partial it already is in 2NF and every determinant is
dependency candidate key.
2.It concentrates on the primary key 2.It concentrates on all candidate keys
4.It may preserve all dependencies 4.It may not preserve all dependencies
5.If there is a dependency X->Y is allowed in 3 5.If there is a dependency X->Y.It is allowed in
NF if X is a super key or Y is a prime key. BCNF if X is a super key.
6.It easy to achieve 6.It is difficult to achieve
Main difference of 3NF and BCNF is that for a functional dependency A->B, 3 NF allows
this dependency in a relation if B is a primary-key attribute and A is not a cndidate key.
Whereas, BCNF insists that for this dependency to remain in a relation, A must be a
candidate key.
Every relation in BCNF is also in 3NF. However, relation in 3NF may not be in BCNF.
19