Fundamentals of database management systems / Mark L. Gillenson.
By: Gillenson, Mark L
Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, c2012Edition: 2nd edDescription: xvi, 395 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 27 cmISBN: 9780470624708 (pbk. : alk. paper)Subject(s): Database management | COMPUTERS / Database Management / GeneralDDC classification: 005.74 LOC classification: QA76.9.D3 | G5225 2012Other classification: COM021000Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Circulation | Sibalom | Sibalom Circulation | 005.74 G4122 2012 (Browse shelf) | 1 | Available | UAMAIN 21467 |
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005.74 C8222 2012 Database principles: : design, implementation, and management fundamentals. | 005.74 C8222 2012 Database principles: : design, implementation, and management fundamentals. | 005.74 E482 2011 Database systems : models, languages, design, and application programming / | 005.74 G4122 2012 Fundamentals of database management systems / | 005.74 H6751 2013 Modern database management / | 005.74 H6987 2013 Modern database management / | 005.74 H6987 2013 Modern database management / |
Includes index.
"Gillenson's new edition of Fundamentals of Database Management Systems provides concise coverage of the fundamental topics necessary for a deep understanding of the basics. In this issue, there is more emphasis on a practical approach, with new "your turn" boxes and much more coverage in a separate supplement on how to implement databases with Access.In every chapter, the author covers concepts first, then show how they're implemented in continuing case(s.) "Your Turn" boxes appear several times throughout the chapter to apply concepts to projects. And "Concepts in Action" boxes contain examples of concepts used in practice. This pedagogy is easily demonstrable and the text also includes more hands-on exercises and projects and a standard diagramming style for the data modeling diagrams. Furthermore, revised and updated content and organization includes more coverage on database control issues, earlier coverage of SQL, and new coverage on data quality issues"-- Provided by publisher.
Machine generated contents note: Chapter 1. Data: The New Corporate ResourceChapter 2. Data ModelingChapter 3. The Database Management System ConceptChapter 4. Relational Data Retrieval: SQLChapter 5. The Relational Database Model: IntroductionChapter 6. The Relational Database Model: Additional ConceptsChapter 7. Logical Database DesignChapter 8. Physical Database DesignChapter 9. Object-Oriented Database ManagementChapter 10. Data Administration, Database Administration, and Data DictionariesChapter 11. Database Control Issues: Security, Backup and Recovery, ConcurrencyChapter 12. Client/Server Database and Distributed DatabaseChapter 13. The Data WarehouseChapter 14. Database and the Internet.
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