000 | 02695nam a22002057a 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
005 | 20240730104023.0 | ||
008 | 240730b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a9789390727506 | ||
082 |
_a005.74 _bSIL |
||
100 | _aSilberschatz, Abraham | ||
245 |
_aDatabase System Concepts _cAbraham Silberschatz, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan |
||
250 | _a7 | ||
260 |
_a New York : _b McGraw-Hill, _c2020 |
||
300 | _a1344 | ||
505 | _tChapter 1: Introduction Part One: Relational Languages Chapter 2: Introduction to the Relational Model Chapter 3: Introduction to SQL Chapter 4: Intermediate SQL Chapter 5: Advanced SQL Part Two: Database Design Chapter 6: Database Design using the E-R model Chapter 7: Relational Database Design Part Three: Application Design and Development Chapter 8: Complex Data Types Chapter 9: Application Development Part Four: Big Data Analytics Chapter 10: Big Data Chapter 11: Data Analytics Part Five: Storage Management and Indexing Chapter 12: Physical Storage Systems Chapter 13: Data Storage Structures Chapter 14: Indexing Part Six: Query Processing and Optimization Chapter 15: Query Processing Chapter 16: Query Optimization Part Seven: Transaction Management Chapter 17: Transactions Chapter 18: Concurrency Control Chapter 19: Recovery Systems Part Eight: Parallel and Distributed Databases Chapter 20: Database System Architectures Chapter 21: Parallel and Distributed Storage Chapter 22: Parallel and Distributed Query Processing Chapter 23: Parallel and Distributed Transaction Processing Part Nine: Advanced Topics Chapter 24: Advanced Indexing Techniques Chapter 25: Advanced Application Development Chapter 26: Blockchain Databases Part Ten: Appendix A Part Eleven: Online Chapters Chapter 27 Formal Relational Query Languages Chapter 28 Advanced Relational Database Design Chapter 29 Object-Based Databases Chapter 30 XML Chapter 31 Information Retrieval Chapter 32 PostgreSQL | ||
520 | _aDatabase System Concepts presents the fundamental concepts of database management in an intuitive manner geared toward allowing students to begin working with databases as quickly as possible. A familiarity with basic data structures, computer organization, and a high-level programming language are the only prerequisites. Important theoretical results are covered, but formal proofs are omitted. In place of proofs, figures and examples are used to suggest why a result is true. Extensive coverage of Big Data systems, from the user perspective, as well as from an internal perspective with extensive additions and modifications | ||
700 | _aHenry F. Korth, | ||
700 | _a S. Sudarshan | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cBK |
||
999 |
_c2347 _d2347 |