How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4) ERD

How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4)

How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4) 512px Devops toolchain.svg
Kharnagy, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Last time in “How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (3)”, I told you about the Oracle Database and Oracle APEX.

This time I will discuss Oracle SQL Developer Data Modeler.

Oracle SQL Developer Data Modeler

A book I can recommend is Oracle SQL Developer Data Modeler for Database Design Mastery by Heli Helskyaho.

Just modeling

I use Data Modeler mainly for modeling, documentation and generating DDL scripts for the initial setup and incremental migration scripts later on. For other activities I use tools that suit me better, the Unix approach.

This utility allows you to define views but I do not use it since it gave me a lot of problems. A simple SQL script to create the view is just enough.

Logical Model

This is the Entity Relationship Model area where you can construct Entity Relationship Diagrams (ERD) like this:

How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4) ERD
Logical Model

You should really take your time to design your model and to verify it using the Design Rules described later on. This is the foundation of your application.

And do not forget to use domains whenever appropriate. You can even have one corporate domains XML file if you prefer.

Relational Models

Each Logical Model may be transformed into a Relation Model, one for Oracle Database 12c, Oracle Database 12cR2 and so on. This allows you to use the features of those versions.

My preference is to just one relational model per Logical Model to keep it simple.

Again you should really take your time to design your relational model and to verify it using the Design Rules described later on. This is the foundation of your application.

Business rules

I am old enough to remember the Business Rules Classification:

How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4) business rules classification
Business Rules Classification

Quite a few business rules can be defined easily using Data Modeler, here some examples:

business rulehow
Department code must be numeric.Column datatype
Employee job must be ‘CLERK’, ‘SALES REP’ or ‘MANAGER’.Use a domain
Employee salary must be a multiple of 1000.Domain (which lets you define a constraint)
Employee exit date must be later than hire date.Table Level Constraints

Other constraints may not fit into Data Modeler and may need to be implemented in another way. For more inspiration I will refer to implementing business rules by Rob van Wijk.

I have had difficulties with constraints implemented by materialized views with refresh fast on commit in an APEX environment. Maybe I did it wrong, maybe the database version (Oracle Database 12) was a little buggy or maybe it works just nice in theory. I resorted to triggers and PL/SQL.

Incremental migration scripts

You can define a connection via:

How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4) import data dictionary
Import Data Dictionary menu option

Then you can use that connection to execute the Synchronize Data Dictionary functionality. This will create an incremental migration script you can use with Flyway. Sometimes you may need to tweak the generated script.

Design Rules and Transformations

One of the features I can really recommend are the Design Rules And TransformationsDesign Rules And Transformations menu

Design Rules

This is the lint like tool of Data Modeler, an analysis tool that flags errors, bugs, stylistic errors and suspicious constructs. Applicable for both the Logical Model and Relational Models.

Custom Transformation Scripts

This allows you to use predefined scripts to do transformations and to define your own.

Here an example for setting the table name to plural. You usually define the entity name in singular and the table name in plural. This custom utility (Table Names Plural - custom) allows you to do it automatically:

var tables = model.getTableSet().toArray();
for (var t = 0; t<tables.length; t++){
	var table = tables[t];
	var tableName = table.getName();
 	if (tableName.endsWith("Y")) {
 		// Y becomes IES
 		table.setName(tableName.slice(0, -1) + "IES");
 		table.setDirty(true);
 	} else if (!tableName.endsWith("S")) {
 		// . becomes .S
 		table.setName(tableName + "S");
 		table.setDirty(true);
 	}
}

Configuration

You can better use one modeling project for all your applications when you use SQL Data Modeler so you can share your configuration more easily between projects and developers.

From my GitHub datamodeler project here the README:

A project to share Oracle SQL Datamodeler settings and scripts. Oracle SQL Developer Data Modeler has several global configuration items like:

  • preferences
  • design rules and transformations
  • default domains

Besides that there are also design preferences and glossaries but you can store them in a version control system easily unlike the global configuration.

The official way to share the global configuration between computers is to use the various import and export utilities from the Data Modeler. However this is quite time consuming and thus error prone.

An easier approach is to just backup these settings to a directory you specify as a command line option (ideally under version control). Then you can restore them when needed. This project tries to accomplish just that: KISS.

It is just a simpler and more friendly approach than using manual export and import actions between developers.

If you collaborate with others you had better keep all the folders and files the same since the configuration contains those names.

Conclusion

Here I shared some ideas about using SQL Developer Data Modeler, a tool that can construct the foundation of your application very well.

Stay tuned!

All articles in this serie

SubjectLink
Introduction“How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (1)”
Database structure“How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (2)”
Oracle Database and Oracle APEX“How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (3)”
Oracle SQL Developer Data Modeler“How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (4)”
Git, Subversion, Maven and Flyway“How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (5)”
Oracle SQL Developer, utPLSQL, SonarQube, Perl, Ant and DevOps“How to build an Oracle Database application (that supports APEX, Java, React or any other front-end) (6)”

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