Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Database Design Using Entity-Relationship Diagrams, Second Edition (Foundations of Database Design) by Sikha Bagui

Rate this book
This comprehensive guide helps database designers and developers learn the ins and outs of entity-relationship (E-R) diagramming. Because E-R diagrams are so fundamental to database design, this book is an indispensable text for teaching computer science students the basics of database development. This second edition features more examples throughout the text, more focused exercises, as well as more coverage of ternary and higher-order ER diagrams, generalizations, and specializations. In addition, the authors provide a new in-depth chapter on reverse engineering along with a new, detailed look at functional dependencies and normal forms.

Hardcover

First published June 27, 2003

1 person is currently reading
11 people want to read

About the author

Sikha Bagui

11 books

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4 (21%)
4 stars
5 (26%)
3 stars
6 (31%)
2 stars
4 (21%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for astaliegurec.
984 reviews
June 20, 2021
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very Well Written Book
August 29, 2008

Bagui and Earp's "Database Design Using Entity-Relationship Diagrams" is a very well written book. It's clear, concise, and well laid out. It also meets their intended audience and intent. From page xiii of the Preface:

"This book is intended to be used by database practitioners and students for data modeling. It is also intended to be used as a supplemental text in database courses, systems analysis and design courses, and other courses that design and implement databases."

And, from page xvii of the Introduction:

"This book was written to aid students in database classes and to help database practitioners in understanding how to arrive at a definite, clear database design using an entity relationship (ER) diagram."

The only reasons I give it a rating of four stars out of five instead of five stars out of five are purely a matter of taste. First, there's not a lot of breadth to this material. So, I'm not all that certain that a whole book is warranted (it really should be covered in full-fledged database books). Second, the majority of the book focuses on "Chen-like" ER diagrams because they are well-used and implementation independent (which is good reasoning). But, I'm pretty sure that most databases are relational nowadays, so more coverage in the vein of the last chapter (the Barker-like relational ER model) would be a good thing. If I could give the book four and one half stars, I would (it's really that good). But, since I can't, four stars will have to do. If you decide you really need a supplemental text in ER Diagrams, you can't go wrong with this book.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.