Relational Algebra and Relational Calculus
Relational Algebra and Relational Calculus
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Relational Algebra
Relational algebra operations work on one or
more relations to define another relation
without changing the original relations.
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Relational algebra VS Relational Calculus
Informally, relational algebra is a (high-level)
procedural language and relational calculus a
non-procedural language. – Difference ??
However, formally both are equivalent to one
another.
A language that produces a relation that can be
derived using relational calculus is relationally
complete.
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Relational Algebra Operations
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Selection (or Restriction)
σ predicate (R)
– Works on a single relation R and defines a relation that
contains only those tuples (rows) of R that satisfy the
specified condition (predicate).
– Unary Operation
σ < condition > < tablename >
Conditions in Selection:
Simple Condition: (attribute)(comparison)(attribute)
(attribute)(comparison)(constant)
Comparison: =,≠,≤,≥,<,>
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Select Operator Example
Person бAge≥34(Person)
Name Age Weight Name Age Weight
Harry 34 80 Harry 34 80
Helena 54 54
Sally 28 64
Peter 34 80
George 29 70
Helena 54 54
Peter 34 80 бAge=Weight(Person)
Name Age Weight
Helena 54 54
Example - Selection (or Restriction)
List all staff with a salary greater than £10,000.
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Projection
Π col1, . . . , coln(R)
– Works on a single relation R and defines a
relation that contains a vertical subset of R,
extracting the values of specified attributes and
eliminating duplicates.
π < column list > < tablename >
e.g., name of employees:
∏ name(Employee)
e.g., name of employees earning more than 80,000:
∏ name(бSalary>80,000(Employee)) 11
Project Operator Example
Employee
Name Age Salary ∏ name(Employee)
Harry 34 80,000 Name
Sally 28 90,000 Harry
George 29 70,000 Sally
Sally 28 90,000
George 29 70,000 ∏ name(бSalary>80,000(Employee))
Helena 54 54,280
Name
Peter 34 40,000
Sally
Example - Projection
Produce a list of salaries for all staff, showing only
staffNo, fName, lName, and salary details.
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Union, Intersection, Set-Difference
All of these operations take two input relations, which
must be union-compatible:
– Same number of fields.
– `Corresponding’ fields have the same type.
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Union
R∪ S
– Union of two relations R and S defines a relation
that contains all the tuples of R, or S, or both R
and S, duplicate tuples being eliminated.
– R and S must be union-compatible.
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Union Operator Example
Student Professor
FN LN
FN LN John Smith
Ricardo Brown
Susan Yao
Susan Yao
Ramesh Shah
Francis Johnson
Barbara Jones Ramesh Shah
Amy Ford Student U Professor
Jimmy Wang
FN LN
Susan Yao
Ramesh Shah
Barbara Jones
Amy Ford
Jimmy Wang
John Smith
Ricardo Brown
Francis Johnson
Example - Union
List all cities where there is either a branch office
or a property for rent.
Π city(Branch) ∪ Π city(PropertyForRent)
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Set Difference
R–S
– Defines a relation consisting of the tuples that
are in relation R, but not in S.
– R and S must be union-compatible.
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Set Difference Operator Example
Professor
Student
FN LN FN LN
Susan Yao John Smith
Student - Professor
Professor - Student FN LN
FN LN
John Smith Barbara Jones
Π city(Branch) – Π city(PropertyForRent)
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Intersection
R∩ S
– Defines a relation consisting of the set of all
tuples that are in both R and S.
– R and S must be union-compatible.
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Intersection Operator Example
Student Professor
FN LN
FN LN
John Smith
Susan Yao
Ricardo Brown
Ramesh Shah Susan Yao
Barbara Jones Francis Johnson
Jimmy Wang
Student ∩ Professor
FN LN
Susan Yao
Ramesh Shah
Example - Intersection
List all cities where there is both a branch office
and at least one property for rent.
Π city(Branch) ∩ Π city(PropertyForRent)
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Cartesian product
RXS
– Defines a relation that is the concatenation of
every tuple of relation R with every tuple of
relation S.
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Example - Cartesian product
List the names and comments of all clients who have
viewed a property for rent.
(Π clientNo, fName, lName(Client)) X (Π clientNo, propertyNo, comment (Viewing))
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Example - Cartesian product and Selection
Use selection operation to extract those tuples where
Client.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo.
σ Client.clientNo = Viewing.clientNo((∏ clientNo, fName, lName(Client)) Χ (∏ clientNo, propertyNo,
comment(Viewing)))
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Join Operations
Various forms of join operation
– Theta join
– Equijoin (a particular type of Theta join)
– Natural join
– Outer join
– Semijoin
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Theta join (θ-join)
R FS
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Theta join (θ-join)
Can rewrite Theta join using basic Selection and
Cartesian product operations.
R FS = σ F(R Χ S)
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Example - Equijoin
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Natural join
R S
– An Equijoin of the two relations R and S over all
common attributes x. One occurrence of each
common attribute is eliminated from the result.
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Example - Natural join
List the names and comments of all clients who
have viewed a property for rent.
(Π clientNo, fName, lName(Client))
(Π clientNo, propertyNo, comment(Viewing))
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Outer join
To display rows in the result that do not have
matching values in the join column, use Outer
join.
R S
– (Left) outer join is join in which tuples from
R that do not have matching values in
common columns of S are also included in
result relation.
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Example - Left Outer join
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Semijoin
R FS
– Defines a relation that contains the tuples of R that
participate in the join of R with S.
– It performs a join on two relations and then project
Over the attributes of first operand.
R F S = Π A(R F S)
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Example - Semijoin
List complete details of all staff who work at the
branch in Glasgow.
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Division
R÷ S
– Defines a relation over the attributes C that consists of
set of tuples from R that match combination of every
tuple in S.
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Example - Division
(Π clientNo, propertyNo(Viewing)) ÷
(Π propertyNo(σ rooms = 3 (PropertyForRent)))
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Relational DBMS
The following tables form part of a database held in a
relational DBMS:
Hotel (hotelNo, hotelName, city)
Room (roomNo, hotelNo, type, price)
Booking (hotelNo, guestNo, dateFrom, dateTo,
roomNo)
Guest (guestNo, guestName, guestAddress)
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Exercise – Determine temporary relations
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Exercise – Gererate Relational algebra
List all hotels.
List all single rooms with a price below £20 per night.
List the names and cities of all guests.
List the price and type of all rooms at the Grosvenor
Hotel.
List all guests currently staying at the Grosvenor Hotel.
List the details of all rooms at the Grosvenor Hotel,
including the name of the guest staying in the room, if
the room is occupied.
List the guest details (guestNo, guestName, and
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