Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 1066
Book Description
This book is SQL SERVER version of our previous book titled “DATA SCIENCE USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. This book uses the SQL SERVER version of Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-science-using-jdbc-and-sql-server.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
DATA SCIENCE USING JDBC AND SQL SERVER WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 1066
Book Description
This book is SQL SERVER version of our previous book titled “DATA SCIENCE USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. This book uses the SQL SERVER version of Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-science-using-jdbc-and-sql-server.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 1066
Book Description
This book is SQL SERVER version of our previous book titled “DATA SCIENCE USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. This book uses the SQL SERVER version of Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-science-using-jdbc-and-sql-server.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
DATA SCIENCE USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 851
Book Description
This book uses the Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The 15 tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from http://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/04/data-science-using-jdbc-and-mysql-with.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 851
Book Description
This book uses the Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The 15 tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from http://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/04/data-science-using-jdbc-and-mysql-with.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND SQL SERVER WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 857
Book Description
This book is SQL SERVER version of our previous book titled “DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. In this project, you will use the SQL VERSION version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-sql-server.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 857
Book Description
This book is SQL SERVER version of our previous book titled “DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. In this project, you will use the SQL VERSION version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-sql-server.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
DATA SCIENCE USING JDBC AND POSTGRESQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 865
Book Description
This book uses the PostgreSQL-version of Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The 15 tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-science-using-jdbc-and-postgresql.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 865
Book Description
This book uses the PostgreSQL-version of Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The 15 tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-science-using-jdbc-and-postgresql.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: top 10 film distribution by release year; top 10 film distribution by rating; top 10 film distribution by rental duration; top 10 film distribution by language; film distribution by categorized rental rate; film distribution by categorized length; film distribution by categorized replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by actor name; top 10 actor name distribution by average rental rate; top 10 actor name distribution by average replacement cost; film distribution by rating; rating distribution by average rental rate; rating distribution by average replacement cost; top 10 film distribution by category name, category distribution by average replacement cost; category distribution by average rental rate; category distribution by length; top 10 city distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by district, top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 address distribution by district; top 10 address distribution by country; top 10 address distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by release year; top 10 inventory distribution by film rating; top 10 inventory distribution by film language; top 10 inventory distribution by film rental duration; top 10 inventory distribution by city; top 10 inventory distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by country; top 10 customer distribution by city; top 10 customer distribution by district; top 10 customer distribution by store country; top 10 customer distribution by store city; top 10 customer distribution by store district; top 10 staff distribution by country; top 10 staff distribution by city; rental distribution by year of rental date; rental distribution by month of rental date; 10 rental distribution by week of rental date; rental distribution by day of rental date; rental distribution by quarter of rental date; rental distribution by film release year; rental distribution by film duration; rental distribution by film rating; top 10 rental distribution by staff name; rental distribution by film language; top 10 rental distribution by film title; rental distribution by customer active; top 10 rental distribution by film category; top 10 rental distribution by actor name; top 10 rental distribution by customer name; top 10 rental distribution by customer city; top 10 rental distribution by customer country, top 10 rental distribution by customer district; payment distribution by year of payment date; payment distribution by month of payment date; top 10 payment distribution by week of payment date; payment distribution by day of payment date; payment distribution by quarter of payment date; payment distribution by film release year; payment distribution by film duration; payment distribution by film rating; top 10 payment distribution by staff name; payment distribution by film language; top 10 payment distribution by film title; payment distribution by customer active; top 10 payment distribution by film category; top 10 payment distribution by actor name; top 10 payment distribution by customer name; top 10 payment distribution by customer city; top 10 payment distribution by customer country; and top 10 payment distribution by customer district.
DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 680
Book Description
In this project, you will use Northwind MySQL database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/04/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-mysql-with.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 680
Book Description
In this project, you will use Northwind MySQL database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/04/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-mysql-with.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
DATA SCIENCE WITH JDBC AND SQLITE USING OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 490
Book Description
In this project, you will develop step by step implementation of JDBC/SQLITE with object-oriented approach using SQLite version of an Oracle sample database named electronics. You will be taught how to plot country distribution in each region; location distribution in each country and region; warehouse distribution in each country, region, and city; product distribution by category name; categorized standard cost and categorized list price values distribution in products table; categorized values in inventories table; employee distribution by job title; customer distribution by categorized credit limit; order distribution by customer employee, status, and by categorized credit limit; the top 10 sales distribution by product name; the top 10 sales distribution by category name; the order distribution by category; and order distribution by status. The electronics database itself is based on a global fictitious company that sells computer hardware including storage, motherboard, RAM, video card, and CPU. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/03/book-jdbc-and-sqlite-with-object.html. In the database, the company maintains the product information such as name, description standard cost, list price, and product line. It also tracks the inventory information for all products including warehouses where products are available. Because the company operates globally, it has warehouses in various locations around the world. The company records all customer information including name, address, and website. Each customer has at least one contact person with detailed information including name, email, and phone. The company also places a credit limit on each customer to limit the amount that customer can owe. Whenever a customer issues a purchase order, a sales order is created in the database with the pending status. When the company ships the order, the order status becomes shipped. In case the customer cancels an order, the order status becomes canceled. In addition to the sales information, the employee data is recorded with some basic information such as name, email, phone, job title, manager, and hire date.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 490
Book Description
In this project, you will develop step by step implementation of JDBC/SQLITE with object-oriented approach using SQLite version of an Oracle sample database named electronics. You will be taught how to plot country distribution in each region; location distribution in each country and region; warehouse distribution in each country, region, and city; product distribution by category name; categorized standard cost and categorized list price values distribution in products table; categorized values in inventories table; employee distribution by job title; customer distribution by categorized credit limit; order distribution by customer employee, status, and by categorized credit limit; the top 10 sales distribution by product name; the top 10 sales distribution by category name; the order distribution by category; and order distribution by status. The electronics database itself is based on a global fictitious company that sells computer hardware including storage, motherboard, RAM, video card, and CPU. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/03/book-jdbc-and-sqlite-with-object.html. In the database, the company maintains the product information such as name, description standard cost, list price, and product line. It also tracks the inventory information for all products including warehouses where products are available. Because the company operates globally, it has warehouses in various locations around the world. The company records all customer information including name, address, and website. Each customer has at least one contact person with detailed information including name, email, and phone. The company also places a credit limit on each customer to limit the amount that customer can owe. Whenever a customer issues a purchase order, a sales order is created in the database with the pending status. When the company ships the order, the order status becomes shipped. In case the customer cancels an order, the order status becomes canceled. In addition to the sales information, the employee data is recorded with some basic information such as name, email, phone, job title, manager, and hire date.
DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND POSTGRESQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 704
Book Description
This book is PostgreSQL version of our previous book titled “DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. In this project, you will use the PostgreSQL version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-postgresql.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 704
Book Description
This book is PostgreSQL version of our previous book titled “DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND MYSQL WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE”. In this project, you will use the PostgreSQL version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/05/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-postgresql.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
DATA VISUALIZATION AND DATA ANALYTICS USING JDBC AND SQLITE WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 523
Book Description
In this project, we developed data visualization and data analytics with step by step implementation of JDBC/SQLITE using object-oriented approach. We uses the SQLite version of BikeStores database as a sample database to help you work with SQLite quickly and effectively. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/03/my-book-data-visualization-and-data.html. In this project, we plotted: the bar chart that displays the distribution of products by category; the pie chart that displays the distribution of products by brand; the distribution of stores by city; the distribution of stores by state; the top 10 stock distributions by category name; the top 10 stock distributions by brand name; the top 10 stock distributions by store name; the top 10 stock distributions by city; the customer distribution by state; the customer distribution by city; the bar chart distribution of staff by state; the bar chart distribution of staff by city; the bar chart that shows the distribution of orders based on the store name; the pie chart that shows the distribution of orders based on the customer name; the pie chart showing the order distribution by store city; the pie chart showing the order distribution by store state; the pie chart showing the order distribution by customer city; the pie chart showing the order distribution by customer state; the pie chart sales distribution by staff name; the pie chart sales distribution by brand name; the pie chart sales distribution by customer city; the pie chart sales distribution by customer state; the pie chart sales distribution by store city; the pie chart sales distribution by store state; the pie chart sales distribution by product name; the pie chart sales distribution by category name; pie chart sales distribution by customer name; and the pie chart sales distribution by store name. The stores table includes the store’s information. Each store has a store name, contact information such as phone and email, and an address including street, city, state, and zip code. The staffs table stores the essential information of staffs including first name, last name. It also contains the communication information such as email and phone. A staff works at a store specified by the value in the store_id column. A store can have one or more staffs. A staff reports to a store manager specified by the value in the manager_id column. If the value in the manager_id is null, then the staff is the top manager. If a staff no longer works for any stores, the value in the active column is set to zero. The categories table stores the bike’s categories such as children bicycles, comfort bicycles, and electric bikes. The products table stores the product’s information such as name, brand, category, model year, and list price. Each product belongs to a brand specified by the brand_id column. Hence, a brand may have zero or many products. Each product also belongs a category specified by the category_id column. Also, each category may have zero or many products. The customers table stores customer’s information including first name, last name, phone, email, street, city, state, zip code, and photo path. The orders table stores the sales order’s header information including customer, order status, order date, required date, shipped date. It also stores the information on where the sales transaction was created (store) and who created it (staff). Each sales order has a row in the sales_orders table. A sales order has one or many line items stored in the order_items table. The order_items table stores the line items of a sales order. Each line item belongs to a sales order specified by the order_id column. A sales order line item includes product, order quantity, list price, and discount. The stocks table stores the inventory information i.e. the quantity of a particular product in a specific store.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 523
Book Description
In this project, we developed data visualization and data analytics with step by step implementation of JDBC/SQLITE using object-oriented approach. We uses the SQLite version of BikeStores database as a sample database to help you work with SQLite quickly and effectively. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/03/my-book-data-visualization-and-data.html. In this project, we plotted: the bar chart that displays the distribution of products by category; the pie chart that displays the distribution of products by brand; the distribution of stores by city; the distribution of stores by state; the top 10 stock distributions by category name; the top 10 stock distributions by brand name; the top 10 stock distributions by store name; the top 10 stock distributions by city; the customer distribution by state; the customer distribution by city; the bar chart distribution of staff by state; the bar chart distribution of staff by city; the bar chart that shows the distribution of orders based on the store name; the pie chart that shows the distribution of orders based on the customer name; the pie chart showing the order distribution by store city; the pie chart showing the order distribution by store state; the pie chart showing the order distribution by customer city; the pie chart showing the order distribution by customer state; the pie chart sales distribution by staff name; the pie chart sales distribution by brand name; the pie chart sales distribution by customer city; the pie chart sales distribution by customer state; the pie chart sales distribution by store city; the pie chart sales distribution by store state; the pie chart sales distribution by product name; the pie chart sales distribution by category name; pie chart sales distribution by customer name; and the pie chart sales distribution by store name. The stores table includes the store’s information. Each store has a store name, contact information such as phone and email, and an address including street, city, state, and zip code. The staffs table stores the essential information of staffs including first name, last name. It also contains the communication information such as email and phone. A staff works at a store specified by the value in the store_id column. A store can have one or more staffs. A staff reports to a store manager specified by the value in the manager_id column. If the value in the manager_id is null, then the staff is the top manager. If a staff no longer works for any stores, the value in the active column is set to zero. The categories table stores the bike’s categories such as children bicycles, comfort bicycles, and electric bikes. The products table stores the product’s information such as name, brand, category, model year, and list price. Each product belongs to a brand specified by the brand_id column. Hence, a brand may have zero or many products. Each product also belongs a category specified by the category_id column. Also, each category may have zero or many products. The customers table stores customer’s information including first name, last name, phone, email, street, city, state, zip code, and photo path. The orders table stores the sales order’s header information including customer, order status, order date, required date, shipped date. It also stores the information on where the sales transaction was created (store) and who created it (staff). Each sales order has a row in the sales_orders table. A sales order has one or many line items stored in the order_items table. The order_items table stores the line items of a sales order. Each line item belongs to a sales order specified by the order_id column. A sales order line item includes product, order quantity, list price, and discount. The stocks table stores the inventory information i.e. the quantity of a particular product in a specific store.
DATA ANALYSIS USING JDBC AND SQLITE WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED APPROACH AND APACHE NETBEANS IDE
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 665
Book Description
In this project, you will use SQLite version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/04/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-sqlite.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 665
Book Description
In this project, you will use SQLite version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. You can download the sample database from https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/04/data-analysis-using-jdbc-and-sqlite.html. In this project, you will design the form for every table and you will plot: the territory distribution by region; the employee distributions based on city, country, title, and region; the employee distributions based on birth date, hire date, and employee name; the employee distributions based on city, country, territory, and region; the three supplier distributions based on city, region, and country; the product distributions based on city, region, country, categorized unit price, categorized units in stock, and categorized units on order; the customer distributions based on city, region, and country; the order and freight distributions based on year, month, and week; the order and freight distributions based on day, quarter, and ship country; the order and freight distributions based on ship region, ship city, and ship name; the order and freight distributions based on shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the order and freight distributions based on customer country, employee name, and employee title; the sales distributions based on year, month, week, day, quarter, and ship country; the sales distributions based on ship region, ship city, ship name, shipper company, customer company, and customer city; the sales distributions based on customer region, customer country, employee name, employee title, employee city, and employee country; the sales distributions based on product name, category name, supplier company, supplier city, supplier region, and supplier country.
Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture
Author: Martin Fowler
Publisher: Addison-Wesley
ISBN: 0133065219
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 558
Book Description
The practice of enterprise application development has benefited from the emergence of many new enabling technologies. Multi-tiered object-oriented platforms, such as Java and .NET, have become commonplace. These new tools and technologies are capable of building powerful applications, but they are not easily implemented. Common failures in enterprise applications often occur because their developers do not understand the architectural lessons that experienced object developers have learned. Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture is written in direct response to the stiff challenges that face enterprise application developers. The author, noted object-oriented designer Martin Fowler, noticed that despite changes in technology--from Smalltalk to CORBA to Java to .NET--the same basic design ideas can be adapted and applied to solve common problems. With the help of an expert group of contributors, Martin distills over forty recurring solutions into patterns. The result is an indispensable handbook of solutions that are applicable to any enterprise application platform. This book is actually two books in one. The first section is a short tutorial on developing enterprise applications, which you can read from start to finish to understand the scope of the book's lessons. The next section, the bulk of the book, is a detailed reference to the patterns themselves. Each pattern provides usage and implementation information, as well as detailed code examples in Java or C#. The entire book is also richly illustrated with UML diagrams to further explain the concepts. Armed with this book, you will have the knowledge necessary to make important architectural decisions about building an enterprise application and the proven patterns for use when building them. The topics covered include · Dividing an enterprise application into layers · The major approaches to organizing business logic · An in-depth treatment of mapping between objects and relational databases · Using Model-View-Controller to organize a Web presentation · Handling concurrency for data that spans multiple transactions · Designing distributed object interfaces
Publisher: Addison-Wesley
ISBN: 0133065219
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 558
Book Description
The practice of enterprise application development has benefited from the emergence of many new enabling technologies. Multi-tiered object-oriented platforms, such as Java and .NET, have become commonplace. These new tools and technologies are capable of building powerful applications, but they are not easily implemented. Common failures in enterprise applications often occur because their developers do not understand the architectural lessons that experienced object developers have learned. Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture is written in direct response to the stiff challenges that face enterprise application developers. The author, noted object-oriented designer Martin Fowler, noticed that despite changes in technology--from Smalltalk to CORBA to Java to .NET--the same basic design ideas can be adapted and applied to solve common problems. With the help of an expert group of contributors, Martin distills over forty recurring solutions into patterns. The result is an indispensable handbook of solutions that are applicable to any enterprise application platform. This book is actually two books in one. The first section is a short tutorial on developing enterprise applications, which you can read from start to finish to understand the scope of the book's lessons. The next section, the bulk of the book, is a detailed reference to the patterns themselves. Each pattern provides usage and implementation information, as well as detailed code examples in Java or C#. The entire book is also richly illustrated with UML diagrams to further explain the concepts. Armed with this book, you will have the knowledge necessary to make important architectural decisions about building an enterprise application and the proven patterns for use when building them. The topics covered include · Dividing an enterprise application into layers · The major approaches to organizing business logic · An in-depth treatment of mapping between objects and relational databases · Using Model-View-Controller to organize a Web presentation · Handling concurrency for data that spans multiple transactions · Designing distributed object interfaces