In earlier work, Bancilhon and Spyratos introduced the concept of a complement to a database schema, and showed how this notion could be used in theories of decomposition and update semantics. However, they also showed that, except in trivial cases, even minimal complements are never unique, so that many desirable results, such as canonical decompositions, cannot be realized. Their work dealt with database schemata which are sets and database mappings which are functions, without further structure. In this work, we show that by adding a modest amount of additional structure, many important uniqueness results may be obtained. Specifically, we work with database schemata whose legal states form partially ordered sets (posets) with least eleme...
AbstractA general formalism, called the general dependencies, is presented. The multivalued, mutual,...
For the problem of reflecting an update on a database view to the main schema, the constant-compleme...
In this paper we present a simple and general model for database schemas and their instances. The mo...
In earlier work, Bancilhon and Spyratos introduced the concept of a complement to a database schema,...
A generalized approach to the decomposition of relational schemata is developed in which the compone...
In the second part, we further investigate algebraic structure of relational databases. The decompos...
Database design aims to find a database schema that permits the efficient processing of common types...
AbstractWe extend the earlier results on the equivalence between the Boolean and the multivalued dep...
AbstractConceptual relations among relational database schemata are investigated.Two different defin...
Views as a means to describe parts of a given data collection play an important role in many databas...
The current schema design theories assume that a database may be regarded as a single relation. From...
AbstractWe consider conditions that have appeared in the literature with the purpose of defining a “...
In this paper we will construct and investigate various aspects of a new, formal model for database ...
Although a database view embodies partial information about the state of the main schema, the state ...
AbstractModern applications increasingly require the storage of data beyond relational structure. Th...
AbstractA general formalism, called the general dependencies, is presented. The multivalued, mutual,...
For the problem of reflecting an update on a database view to the main schema, the constant-compleme...
In this paper we present a simple and general model for database schemas and their instances. The mo...
In earlier work, Bancilhon and Spyratos introduced the concept of a complement to a database schema,...
A generalized approach to the decomposition of relational schemata is developed in which the compone...
In the second part, we further investigate algebraic structure of relational databases. The decompos...
Database design aims to find a database schema that permits the efficient processing of common types...
AbstractWe extend the earlier results on the equivalence between the Boolean and the multivalued dep...
AbstractConceptual relations among relational database schemata are investigated.Two different defin...
Views as a means to describe parts of a given data collection play an important role in many databas...
The current schema design theories assume that a database may be regarded as a single relation. From...
AbstractWe consider conditions that have appeared in the literature with the purpose of defining a “...
In this paper we will construct and investigate various aspects of a new, formal model for database ...
Although a database view embodies partial information about the state of the main schema, the state ...
AbstractModern applications increasingly require the storage of data beyond relational structure. Th...
AbstractA general formalism, called the general dependencies, is presented. The multivalued, mutual,...
For the problem of reflecting an update on a database view to the main schema, the constant-compleme...
In this paper we present a simple and general model for database schemas and their instances. The mo...