Database Modeling with Microsoft Visio for Enterprise Architects

Database Modeling with Microsoft Visio for Enterprise Architects

by Bill Maclean (Contributor), Terry Halpin (Author), Ken Evans (Contributor), Patrick Hallock (Contributor)

Synopsis

This book is for database designers and database administrators using Visio, which is the database component of Microsoft's Visual Studio .NET for Enterprise Architects suite, also included in MSDN subscriptions. This is the only guide to this product that tells DBAs how to get their job done. Although primarily focused on tool features, the book also provides an introduction to data modeling, and includes practical advice on managing database projects. The principal author was the program manager of VEA's database modeling solutions.

$84.98

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 440
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann
Published: 14 Aug 2003

ISBN 10: 1558609199
ISBN 13: 9781558609198
Book Overview: Learn database modeling using ORM. Perfect for users of Visual Studio .NET for Enterprise Architects and subscribers to MSDN.

Author Bio
Dr. Terry Halpin is a professor at Northface University. He has led database research teams at several companies including Visio Corporation and Microsoft Corporation, where he worked on the conceptual and logical database modeling technology in Microsoft Visio for Enterprise Architects. His publications include over 100 technical papers and five books. Ken Evans has taught and applied ORM in English and French for 10 years. His know-how in data and process modeling and complex systems management comes from over 30 years in industry, including international jobs with IBM, EDS, Honeywell Controls, and Plessy and clients among the Fortune 500. Patrick Hallock, M.S., is the founder of InConcept, a consulting firm, and teaches object modeling throughout the United States. He has been in the industry for 30 years, focusing on database design, with an emphasis on ORM. Bill MacLean, CPA, is an independent consultant and teacher who has worked with relational databases for over 15 years, and consulted in database design for the last 9. He believes that the purpose of a data model is to turn business requirements into buildable specifications.