Re: A new proof of the superiority of set oriented approaches: numerical/time serie linear interpolation

From: Cimode <cimode_at_hotmail.com>
Date: 2 May 2007 05:04:44 -0700
Message-ID: <1178107484.509675.247970_at_y5g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>


On May 2, 11:18 am, Jon Heggland <jon.heggl..._at_idi.ntnu.no> wrote:
> Brian Selzer wrote:
> > "Cimode" <cim..._at_hotmail.com> wrote in message
> >news:1178044184.315215.167590_at_p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
> >> What is a *database value* ? What do you mean that a database
> >> (collection of facts) is one single value? Do you mean a relation
> >> value? (the database being perceived as one single complex relation?)
>
> > The term "database" is pretty loaded. Most of the time a database is a
> > value, a set of relations conforming to a particular schema--a
> > representation of a collection of facts at a particular instant. In the
> > context of modification, on the other hand, a database is a mutable entity
> > whose state transitions from value to value as a result of a series of
> > events. I use the phrases "database value" and "database state" to
> > forestall any confusion.
>
> > A set is a value. A database (in the first sense) is a set of named sets
> > (relations) of sets (tuples) of named values (attribute values) that
> > conforms to a particular schema. Therefore it is a single value.
>
> Or, if you want to simplify the above by avoiding "state" and "mutable",
> you could say (as D&D do) that a database is a variable---a
> dbvar---which has a db value. Which is a tuple.
> --
> Jon
Stating that a database is a relation is much safer. Received on Wed May 02 2007 - 14:04:44 CEST

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