Example ERD
The following
ERD shows the tables and attributesexample shows an ERD for a school. Each box represents a different table.
Key Concepts
Term | Means | School Example | |
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Table | A table represents a thing or entity. The table name is displayed in the blue area.
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Tables:
| |
Attributes | The table has a list of attributes. If you display the table data in a grid, the attributes |
are the column headers. They name what the data is, and sets the type (date, integer, string etc.) and |
any format details. | Student table has attributes:
| |||
Primary key | PhixFlow automatically generates an attribute that is the unique identifier, UID. This is the table's primary key. The records for this attribute will all have a unique value. You may want to rename UID to something more descriptive, although it's a good idea to include ID in the name. Primary keys are indicated using a green key icon.
| Primary |
keys in different tables:
| |
Relationship | You can create a relationship between the primary key in one table, to an attribute in another table. On the diagram the relationship is shown as an arrow from a primary key to an attribute in another table. Relationships always point from a primary key to a non-primary attribute. When you are designing screens, you can create views to display attributes from a table AND from |
other, related tables. Between two tables with multiple relationships, each connection must have a unique name. | By convention, set the name of a relationship an action (verb) that follows the left-right flow of the diagram.
|
Foreign key | Relationships show that the data in a primary key in one table also appears in an attribute in another table. |
The attribute may have a different name, but it must represent the same data. This attribute is a foreign key. Foreign keys are indicated using a grid icon. When you create a relationship in an ERD, PhixFlow automatically sets the foreign key status for the attribute. | Employee attributes:
Department attributes
|
Understanding Relationships
Relationships From and To
Relationships between tables have a direction that depends on the table on which table you are focused on. For example, looking at the Teacher table, shown below has two , you can see 2 relationships.
- The school DepartmentID primary key connects Into connect into the Teacher table. This inbound relationship is highlighted in blue.
- And the The Teach table connects From its connects from its TeacherID primary key to an attribute in the Course table. This outbound relationship is highlighted in green.
One-to-many and Many-to-One
The arrow is always drawn from a primary key to another, non-primary, attribute. This This represents a one-to-many relationship, for example, one teacher→ runs→ many courses.
For this type of relationship, PhixFlow automatically sets it to be aggregate. This means the relationship reports the total number. So a teacher runs 3 courses. In the ?? properties, you can clear the aggregate setting to report the full list of their courses.
A many-to-one relationship is implied when you read a relationship in the opposite direction. For example, a departhment has many teachers, and several teachers work for one department.
Finding out about the relationships between tables
- Use the ERD. You can highlight relationships From and To
- Use the properties?? Relationships are listed under From and To
Many-to-many
To create a many-to-many relationship, you need an intermediate table that has foreign key attributes from the tables you want to connect.
For example, there is a many-to-many relationship between customers and products.
- A customer → buys → many products
- A product → is bought by → many customers
The intermediate Customer Purchase Record table has both the CustomerID and ProductID as foreign keys.
- Customer purchase → records → CustomerIDs
- Customer purchase record → lists → ProductIDs
Finding out about the relationships between tables
- Use the ERD. You can highlight relationships From and To
- Use the properties?? Relationships are listed under From and To
Shift select
square select
Example
In a relationship diagram, a stream and its attributes are displayed as a box. You can expand or collapse the box using the icon in the top left. PhixFlow shows all the attributes when the stream is expanded, and only the primary and foreign keys when it is collapsed.
The following diagram shows some relationships between streams that represent a company, its employees and departments, the products it makes and the customers who buy them.
The company "contains" many departments. An employee "works in" a department, and a department can have many team members. In this company, the department "makes" several products, which "ship to" many customers.
Relationship diagrams are useful because you can design relational views that use data from multiple streams. For example, you might want a view that shows the employee details by department. This will display data from the Employee stream and the Department stream. The relationship diagram shows these are connected by the DepartmentID attribute.
Relationship Diagrams in the Repository
When you create a relationship diagram, you start in the repository. Find theAs you draw the diagram, PhixFlow adds items to the repository:
- a stream for each table; see
- a stream attributes for each attribute. These are nested under the stream in the repository.
- a relation for each relationship.
Relationship Diagrams and Relational Views
Relationship diagrams underpin the ability to create views that combine data from different streams.
When you create a GUI screen for an application, a view can display the data records for selected attributes using a Stream View. This can be a grid (table), a graph or a chart. If a table has no relationships to other tables, PhixFlow can only show attributes and records from that stream.
When a table has a direct relationship to other tables in a relationship diagram, PhixFlow can display the data for the attributes from the related tables.
For example, with the following relationship diagram, you can create a view based on the "Departement" stream that shows
- Company name from table Company
- Department names from table Department
- Product category and Status from table Products
todo better diagram and example
Check its in PhixFlow the delete
Select a grouped set of items and then click to ungroup them.
Select several items then click to group them together.
Back: ?
Align selected items to the left
Align selected items to the right
Align selected objects to the top
Align selected objects to the bottom
Click to list available tables
Context Menu
Permanently Delete → Delete (no undo)
Video showing a worked examples
scripts incontext
Icons
Video script (4 mins)
Bullet pointed list of where incontext
On entry, on creations...
Sketch out in Word
Incontext help design?
Title, video script, links....
Have a look at how the GUI is being affected by changes to ICONS
Close of play TUESDAY
title | Special terms on this page |
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borderColor | #072171 |
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borderStyle | solid |
title | Terms |
inbound/outbound
Primary key
attribute
foreign key