Diagram updates, Change IntakeYear to Date
The table has a list of attributes, which represent the different data you want to record. For example, in the the Student table in the ERD above has the attributes: UID, Address, IntakeYear and Name.
Attributes are configured with a data type and associated properties, for example the Name and Address attributes are labelled as "String". To make it easy to create an attribute, PhixFlow sets the type to String by default. To change the attribute to reflect the nature of your data, click on the attribute name to open it's properties, where you can set the type. For example, IntakeYear is set to Date. It is important to set the correct data type and properties before loading records into a table, as you cannot change the data type once the table contains records.
If you have data outside of PhixFlow, we recommend you use a PhixFlow analysis model to connect to your data source(s) and use them to create your table structure; see Load Data. This means PhixFlow can create tables and can determine the data type for the attributes.
This documentation refers to a specific attribute using the form table.attribute, for example: Teacher.Name, Student.Name or SchoolDept.Name. Ask if this notation or other notation is being used in the product - order or how would you do it in an expression...
Relationships and Foreign Keys
Sometimes we want to have the same data in multiple places, but only update it in one location.... (to show the value). feels a little vague and doesn't do justice to the value of the relationships For example, both the Teacher and ClassRoom tables need to have the name of a department. The ERD represents these relationships using a line that joins the SchoolDept table to the ClassRoom table and to the Teacher table (screenshot below).
You are not just adding a line to a picture - you are creating a relationship that PhixFlow can use data from the other table...
One-to-many and Many-to-one
PhixFlow always draws a relationship line from a primary key to foreign key. This makes little sense unless the line has an obvious direction, and now that we're using the crow's foot notation there is no obvious direction. This represents a one-to-many relationship. The "many" end of the line has several lines. For example, one teacher runs many courses. A many-to-one relationship is implied when you read a relationship in the opposite direction. For example, a department has many teachers, and several teachers work for one department.
Come back and add something after doing relational views and aggregation: Gary says: This doesn't really explain why one-to-many / many-to-one are important. You might want to include worked examples showing the data you will get if you build a view starting with Teacher and a similar view starting with SchoolDept. You should also cover the importance of the 'Primary' table (the starting table in a joined view, in particular that you will only be able to edit fields that came from the Primary table, and only then if you haven't followed a one-to-many relationship.
Many-to-many
To create a many-to-many relationship, you need an intermediate table that has foreign key attributes from each of the tables you want to have a relationship. For example, many students take many courses. A many-to-many relationship is shown below, using the intermediate table called CourseAttendee.
- A course is attended by many students
- A student takes many courses.
Show in a relational view with worked examples in a table e.g using data in tables Sketch something up and use mockaroo and powerpoint for images: Again, I think this would benefit from a worked example showing that you get records with combinations of records from each table.
Why ERDs are Important
The ERD's tables, attributes and relationships define the logical structure of the data that your application uses.
Just that it relates to views and views talk about how you access them - keep this simple - show an example with real data....
However, a table has attributes that you may not want an application user to see, such as UIDs or audit data. How does this sentence relate to ERDs? When you are creating views to display data in your application, you may want to combine attributes from different table s into one view. For example, your application might want to show:
- Course Name
- Department Name
- Teacher Name
- Number of Students
Each of these attributes comes from a different table. The relationships that you create between tables in an ERD make it possible for PhixFlow to create views using attributes from different tables. For example:
Check annotation
This is done via a view picker.
Course Table - 1 relationship to Teacher Table
- Course.Teacher to Teacher.UID and display name Teacher.Name
Course Table - 2 relationships to Department Table (Tech check: this is true??)
- Course.Teacher to Teacher.UID
- Teacher.Department to SchoolDept.UID to SchoolDept.Name.
I feel this is too technical an example, where would a user see/ use this annotation? Should we show an example in an application or something more visual with the descriptions?
Creating PhixFlow Tables From Existing Data
You can create tables in an ERD, but this is time consuming. If you already have data, PhixFlow can create tables from it.
Starting Point | Easiest Method | See |
---|---|---|
I have no data | Define the tables, attributes and their relationships in the ERD. You will need to add records to the tables. | Defining Data Structures using ERDs ??How |
I have data in Excel files | Drag the Excel files directly into an ERD. PhixFlow loads the data and adds the table to the ERD. In the ERD, you then add the relationships between tables. | ??Link to doc on XD flow 4.10 |
I have data but it's not in PhixFlow | First use an analysis model to connect to your data. PhixFlow can read the data structures to create tables. When you run analysis on the model, PhixFlow loads the data records. | Load Data |
I have data in PhixFlow already | In the ERD toolbar, click the (wrong icon) to display a list of all the tables. Drag tables into the ERD and then add the relationships. Show Table | Defining Data Structures using ERDs |
If you are working with tables that have records, to see the records:
- In the ERD, click on a table to open its properties.
- In the properties toolbar, click . More Options
- Select . Show view
- PhixFlow displays a the default grid view, listing all the data records.