Could anybody help me to know what is normalization in mysql and in which case and how we need to use it..
Thanks in advance.
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Could anybody help me to know what is normalization in mysql and in which case and how we need to use it.. Thanks in advance.
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I try to attempt to explain normalization in layman terms here. First off, it is something that applies to relational database (Oracle, Access, MySQL) so it is not only for MySQL. Normalisation is about making sure each table has the only minimal fields and to get rid of dependencies. Imagine you have an employee record, and each employee belongs to a department. If you store the department as a field along with the other data of the employee, you have a problem - what happens if a department is removed? You have to update all the department fields, and there's opportunity for error. And what if some employees does not have a department (newly assigned, perhaps?). Now there will be null values. So the normalisation, in brief, is to avoid having fields that would be null, and making sure that the all the fields in the table only belong to one domain of data being described. For example, in the employee table, the fields could be id, name, social security number, but those three fields have nothing to do with the department. Only employee id describes which department the employee belongs to. So this implies that which department an employee is in should be in another table. Here's a simple normalization process. EMPLOYEE ( < employee_id >, name, social_security, department_name) This is not normalized, as explained. A normalized form could look like EMPLOYEE ( < employee_id >, name, social_security) Here, the Employee table is only responsible for one set of data. So where do we store which department the employee belongs to? In another table EMPLOYEE_DEPARTMENT ( , department_name ) This is not optimal. What if the department name changes? (it happens in the US government all the time). Hence it is better to do this EMPLOYEE_DEPARTMENT ( < employee_id >, department_id ) DEPARTMENT ( < department_id >, department_name ) There are first normal form, second normal form and third normal form. But unless you are studying a DB course, I usually just go for the most normalized form I could understand. Hope this helps. |
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Normalization is not for MYSql only. Its a general database concept.
Normal forms in SQL are given below.
Seel also |
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It's a technique for ensuring that your data remains consistent, by eliminating duplication. So a database in which the same information is stored in more than one table is not normalized. See the Wikipedia article on Database normalization. (It's a general technique for relational databases, not specific to MySQL.) |
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Edit: Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_normalization |
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While creating a database schema for your application, you need to make sure that you avoid any information being stored in more than one column across different tables. As every table in your DB, identifies a significant entity in your application, a unique identifier is a must-have columns for them. Now, while deciding the storage schema, various kinds of relationships are being identified between these entities (tables), viz-a-viz, one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many.
Once you attend to all these scenarios, your db-schema will be normalized to 4NF. |
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check this post has helpful suggestions Barry's Tutorial on understanding a Database Schema
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