What is a Database?
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What is a Database?
A database is a data structure
that stores organized information. Most databases contain multiple tables,
which may each include several different fields. For example, a company
database may include tables for products, employees, and financial records. Each
of these tables would have different fields that are relevant to the
information stored in the table.
Nearly all e-commerce sites
uses databases to store product inventory and customer information. These sites
use a database management system (or DBMS), such as
Microsoft Access, FileMaker Pro, or MySQL as
the "back end" to the website. By storing website data in a database,
the data can be easily searched, sorted, and updated. This flexibility is
important for e-commerce sites and other types of dynamic websites
Early databases were relativ
ely "flat,"
which means they were limited to simple rows and columns, like a spreadsheet.
(See also "flat file database"). However, today's relational
databases allow users to access, update, and search information based on the
relationship of data stored in different tables. Relational databases can also
run queries that involve multiple databases. While early databases could only
store text or numeric data, modern databases also let users store other data types such
as sound clips, pictures, and videos.
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