05172cam a2200481Ii 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070040013500111020003600246020003300282020001800315035003900333050001500372072002500387082001500412100004300427245009200470264003400562264001200596300002200608336002600630337002600656338003600682588008200718504004100800520053900841505058901380505058601969505060302555505060603158505056303764650002204327650001704349650004804366650004304414650004804457655002204505776008804527856007504615ocn932289266OCoLC20190328114813.0m o d cr cnu---unuuu151216s2016 ne ob 000 0 eng d aN$TbengerdaepncN$TdIDEBKdN$TdYDXCPdOCLCFdCDXdOPELSdB24X7dSTFdDEBSZdAU@dOCLCQdD6HdLIVdOCLCQdU3WdWRMdCOOdOCLCQ a9780128053355q(electronic bk.) a0128053356q(electronic bk.) z9780128051856 a(OCoLC)932289266z(OCoLC)956740331 4aQA76.9.D37 7aCOMx0210302bisacsh04a005.742231 aHaq, Qazi Muhammad Rashid Ul,eauthor.10aData mapping for data warehouse design / h[electronic resource]cQamar Shahbaz Ul Haq. 1aAmsterdam :bElsevier,c2016. 4c�2016 a1 online resource atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier0 aOnline resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed December 18, 2015). aIncludes bibliographical references. aData mapping in data warehouse lifecycle is the process of creating a link between two distinct data models' (source and target) tables/attributes. It is required at many stages of DW life-cycle to transform data from one state to another; every stage has its own unique requirements and challenges. This book provides basic and advanced knowledge about data mapping/data transformation. It contains real life scenarios that readers face and presents solutions/standard techniques across various domains. --cEdited summary from book.0 aFront Cover -- Data Mapping for Data Warehouse Design -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- Definition -- 2 Data Mapping Stages -- Mapping from the Source to the Data Warehouse Landing Area -- Mapping from the Landing Area to the Staging Database -- Mapping from the Staging Database to the Load Ready or Target Database -- Mapping from Logical Data Model to the Semantic or Access Layer -- 3 Data Mapping Types -- Logical Data Mapping -- Physical Data Mapping -- 4 Data Models -- Definition -- Entity -- Relationship -- Attributes -- Normalized Data Model.8 aFirst Normal Form -- Second Normal Form -- Third Normal Form -- Dimensional Data Model -- Fact -- Dimension -- Measure -- Drill-Down and Roll-Up -- Star Schema -- Fact Tables -- Dimension Tables -- 5 Data Mapper's Strategy and Focus -- Mapper Who? How Does He or She Do It? -- 6 Uniqueness of Attributes and its Importance -- Telecom -- Manufacturing -- Finance -- Uniqueness in Data Warehouse -- 7 Prerequisites of Data Mapping -- Logical Data Model -- Entities and Their Description -- Attributes and Their Description -- Primary Key of Entities -- Relationship Between Entities.8 aCardinality of the Relationship -- Change Capture Column of History-Handled Entities -- Physical Data Model -- Source System Data Model -- Source System Table and Attribute Details -- Subject Matter Expert -- Production Quality Data -- 8 Surrogate Keys versus Natural Keys -- Natural Keys -- Surrogate Keys -- 9 Data Mapping Document Format -- Header-Level Rules -- Column-Level Rules -- Major Parts of the Data Mapping Document -- Data Mapping Columns Explained -- Change Date -- Subject Area -- Target Table Name -- Target Column Name -- Data Type -- PK -- Nullable -- Source System -- Record ID.8 aSource Table Name -- Source Column Name -- Data Type of Source Column -- Transformation Category -- Transformation Rule -- Updated By -- Mapping Priority or Sequence -- 10 Data Analysis Techniques -- Source Data Sample -- Direct Access -- Extraction from a Source -- Data Files -- What to Look For -- High-Level Inter-Source System Relationship -- Intra-Source System Table-Level Analysis -- Column-Level Analysis -- Uniqueness -- Full Row Duplicates -- Primary Key Duplicates -- Multiple Extracts -- Source System Updates -- History Pattern Analysis -- Type 0 -- Type 1 -- Type 2 -- Type 3 -- Type 4.8 aType 6 -- Temporal Database -- Transaction Time -- Definition -- Limitations -- Valid Time -- Definition -- Limitations -- History Data Verification -- SQL Tools -- Automatic Query Generators -- Aggregate Functions -- Window and Rank Functions -- Microsoft Excel and Other Tools -- Remove Duplicates -- Sort -- Pivot Tables -- 11 Data Quality -- What Is Data Quality? -- How Do You Benefit from Data Quality? -- Factors Determining Data Quality -- Accurate Data -- Complete Data -- Legible Data -- Relevant Data -- Reliable Data -- Timely Data -- Valid Data. 0aData warehousing. 0aData mining. 7aCOMPUTERSxDatabasesxData Mining.2bisacsh 7aData mining.2fast0(OCoLC)fst00887946 7aData warehousing.2fast0(OCoLC)fst00888026 4aElectronic books.08iErscheint auch als:aUl Haq, Qamar Shahbaz.tData mapping for data warehouse design403ScienceDirectuhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/book/9780128051856