Re: Mr. Stuckle and Mr. Miller - explain normalisation with an example [message #185285 is a reply to message #185277] |
Sun, 16 March 2014 23:20 |
Mr Oldies
Messages: 241 Registered: October 2013
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Senior Member |
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On Sun, 16 Mar 2014 21:54:18 +0100, Luuk wrote:
> On 16-3-2014 21:22, richard wrote:
>> I'll bet you won't.
>>
>> The table I have now consists of the following columns.
>> songid,hits, title, author, license.
>> Please explain how this data should be normalised.
>> And why.
>> Thank you.
>>
>
> The column 'author' should be an 'authorId'.
>
> why?
> - Because 1 author can write more than 1 song
> - An author has properties to, like i.e.:
> - birtdate
> - date of death (if applicable)
> - city of birth
> - etc
> - etc
> Another advantage of this is that, when you found out that you
> misspelled the name of this author, you only need to change 1 record to
> correct the songs of this author.
>
> Another example of this might be 'license'
> If i ask questions like:
> When became this license valid?
> And 'until when was this a valid license'?
> Did the author have more than 1 license?
>
> You might say "this is not applicable to my application"
> But, in real life, one should be prepared that this will become
> applicable for your application. (Because users only start to think
> after they see the portential of your application)
Actually, that should have been artist, not author.
for my purposes, personal information on either the artist, or author is
not necessary.
As one particular song could have been performed by any number of artists,
that is why the artist column is included. To distinguish the songs.
As for the author, that is actually optional.
Most people don't even care to know who the author is.
But it's there for helping to identify the song.
And that particular table I will use to generate quarterly reports to the
licensing agents, BMI and ASCAP.
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