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{{
{{Distinguish|
[[File:ORM-diagram-tkz-orm.png|406px|thumb|Example of an ORM2 diagram]]
'''
An
The term "
== History ==
The roots of ORM can be traced to research into semantic modeling for information systems in Europe during the 1970s. There were many pioneers and this short summary does not by any means mention them all. An early contribution came in 1973 when Michael Senko wrote about "data structuring" in the IBM Systems Journal. In 1974 Jean-Raymond Abrial contributed an article about "Data Semantics". In June 1975, [[Eckhard Falkenberg]]'s doctoral thesis was published and in 1976 one of Falkenberg's papers mentions the term "
[[G.M. Nijssen]] made fundamental contributions by introducing the "circle-box" notation for object types and roles, and by formulating the first version of the conceptual schema design procedure. Robert Meersman extended the approach by adding subtyping, and introducing the first truly conceptual query language.
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In 1989, [[Terry Halpin]] completed his PhD thesis on ORM, providing the first full formalization of the approach and incorporating several extensions.
Also in 1989, [[Terry Halpin]] and [[G.M. Nijssen]] co-authored the book "Conceptual Schema and Relational Database Design" and several joint papers, providing the first formalization of
A graphical NIAM design tool which included the ability to generate database-creation scripts for Oracle, DB2 and DBQ was developed in the early 1990s in Paris. It was originally named Genesys and was marketed successfully in France and later Canada. It could also handle ER diagram design. It was ported to SCO Unix, SunOs, DEC 3151's and Windows 3.0 platforms, and was later migrated to succeeding [[Microsoft]] operating systems, utilising XVT for cross operating system graphical portability. The tool was renamed OORIANE and is currently being used for large data warehouse and SOA projects.
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== Concepts ==
[[File:Object-Role Model Overview.jpg|thumb|240px|right|Overview of
=== Facts ===
With ORM, [[proposition]]s such as these, are abstracted into "fact types" for example "Person was hired on Date" and the individual propositions are regarded as sample data. The difference between a "fact" and an "elementary fact" is that an elementary fact cannot be simplified without loss of meaning. This "fact-based" approach facilitates modeling, transforming, and querying information from any ___domain.<ref name="orm.net">{{Cite web | url=http://www.orm.net/pdf/ORM2_TechReport1.pdf
=== Attribute-free ===
ORM is attribute-free: unlike models in the [[
=== Fact-based modeling ===
[[Fact-based
Fact-based textual representations are based on formal subsets of native languages. ORM proponents argue that ORM models are easier to understand by people without a technical education. For example, proponents argue that
=== ORM 2 graphical notation ===
ORM2 is the latest generation of
* More compact display of ORM models without compromising clarity
* Improved internationalization (e.g. avoid English language symbols)
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* [[Concept map]]
* [[Conceptual schema]]
* [[Enhanced entity–relationship model
* [[Information flow diagram]]
* [[Ontology double articulation]]
* [[Ontology engineering]]
* [[Relational algebra]]
* [[Three
== References ==
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== External links ==
{{Commons category|Object role modeling}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Object Role Modeling}}
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