|  | Posted by Martijn Tonies on 04/13/07 07:23 
> > > > Here is a theoretical, and definition question for you.> >
 > > > > In databases, we have:
 > >
 > > > > Relation
 > > > > a table with columns and rows
 > >
 > > > > Attribute
 > > > > a named column/field of a relation
 > >
 > > > > Domain
 > > > > a set of allowable values for one or more attributes
 > >
 > > > > Tuple
 > > > > a row of a relation
 > >
 > > > > Degree
 > > > > the number of attributes a relation contains
 > > > > Number of fields in a table
 > >
 > > > > Cardinality
 > > > > the number of tuples/rows a relation contains
 > >
 > > > > But!
 > >
 > > > > What is the definition for the number of unique values in a field?
 > >
 > > > > So, if you have 100 rows in a table, and the field is
 > > > > the gender field, with only values of:  M, F.
 > > > > The result is 2 unique values.
 > >
 > > > > What do we call this concept?
 > > > > "the number of unique values in a column?"
 > >
 > > > > Is there one?
 > >
 > > > > Thanks a lot!
 > >
 > > > (Column) Cardinality = number of distinct column/attribute values.
 > > > Table Cardinality = number of rows in a table.
 > >
 > > Shouldn't that be *distinct* (non-duplicate) rows in the table?
 >
 > I believe that one of the cardinal rules (pun intended) of RDBMS
 > theory is that a table can never have duplicate rows.
 
 True. There's no point in having duplicate rows, cause you can't tell
 which one you're handling :-)
 
 
 
 --
 Martijn Tonies
 Database Workbench - development tool for MySQL, and more!
 Upscene Productions
 http://www.upscene.com
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 http://blog.upscene.com/martijn/
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