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Set Valued Attributes

Set Valued Attributes

Karthikeyan Ramasamy, Prasad M. Deshpande
Copyright: © 2005 |Pages: 6
ISBN13: 9781591405603|ISBN10: 1591405602|EISBN13: 9781591407959
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59140-560-3.ch104
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MLA

Ramasamy, Karthikeyan, and Prasad M. Deshpande. "Set Valued Attributes." Encyclopedia of Database Technologies and Applications, edited by Laura C. Rivero, et al., IGI Global, 2005, pp. 632-637. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-560-3.ch104

APA

Ramasamy, K. & Deshpande, P. M. (2005). Set Valued Attributes. In L. Rivero, J. Doorn, & V. Ferraggine (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Database Technologies and Applications (pp. 632-637). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-560-3.ch104

Chicago

Ramasamy, Karthikeyan, and Prasad M. Deshpande. "Set Valued Attributes." In Encyclopedia of Database Technologies and Applications, edited by Laura C. Rivero, Jorge Horacio Doorn, and Viviana E. Ferraggine, 632-637. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2005. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-560-3.ch104

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Abstract

About three decades ago, when Codd (1970) invented the relational database model, it took the database world by storm. The enterprises that adapted it early won a large competitive edge. The past two decades have witnessed tremendous growth of relational database systems, and today the relational model is by far the dominant data model and is the foundation for leading DBMS products, including IBM DB2, Informix, Oracle, Sybase, and Microsoft SQL server. Relational databases have become a multibillion-dollar industry.

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