CrdCrew
Professional Crew Of Carders
Search titles only
By:
Menu
CrdCrew
Home
Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New profile posts
Latest activity
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search titles only
By:
Latest activity
Register
Contact Admin :
[email protected]
for Purchasing Advertisement or Other Matters
[ TXN ] :: [ BIGGEST SHOP - HIGH VALID & DAILY FRESH UPDATE - BEST OFFER FOR SELLER]
VCLUB AUTOMATED CC|DUMPS FRESH DAILY UPDATE / VCLUB Автоматизированный СC|DUMPS Магазин
Home
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
relationship building
Recent contents
View information
Top users
Description
An entity–relationship model (or ER model) describes interrelated things of interest in a specific domain of knowledge. A basic ER model is composed of entity types (which classify the things of interest) and specifies relationships that can exist between entities (instances of those entity types).
In software engineering, an ER model is commonly formed to represent things a business needs to remember in order to perform business processes. Consequently, the ER model becomes an abstract data model, that defines a data or information structure that can be implemented in a database, typically a relational database.
Entity–relationship modeling was developed for database and design by Peter Chen and published in a 1976 paper, with variants of the idea existing previously. Today it is commonly used for teaching students the basics of database structure. Some ER models show super and subtype entities connected by generalization-specialization relationships, and an ER model can also be used to specify domain-specific ontologies.
View More On Wikipedia.org
Home
Menu
Log in
Register
Forums
What's new
Log in
Register
Search
Top