Extended 11 Dec 10
What does the question mean ?
Before answering the "notation" question, which is the small visible issue on the surface, we need to understand the issues that underpin it, which lead to the surface issues. Otherwise the relevance to the question is reduced to personal preferences; what some product or other provides, whether it is free, etc.
Standards
I assume that the reader has no argument that bridges built for the public out of the public purse (as opposed to hobby bridges built on private land for personal use) need to have standards, in order to ensure that they do not fall over; that they can carry the declared traffic, and that people will not die while using them. The intended standards are first presented by highly acknowledged and recognised engineering experts, and heavily practised and tested by their peers, eventually attaining the status of a Standard, and being declared as such by government standards bodies. The authorities then simply identify the standards that all suppliers must conform to, in order to supply bridges to the government.
It is a waste of time to engage is discussion with non-compliant engineering companies, as what or why their sub-standard offering is worthy of evaluation. Or to look at diagrams that have specific information (demanded by the Standard) missing from them. Or to talk to companies presenting themselves as bridge builders, but who have no civil engineers on the payroll.
Standards are Normalised
Another important aspect of Standards, is that there is no repetition. The bridge building standard only has to refer to the electrical standard for all wiring on the bridge, it does not repeat the content. Standards are Normalised. This allows each Standard to progress and change (eg. as appropriate, due to new building materials becoming available), without affecting other standards or their compliance.
Likewise, Standards do not compete. If one complies with the bridge building standard, there is no danger that one has broken the communications standard.
Standards relate to Higher Principles
Standards are thus the higher principles that every supplier who genuinely supplies quality and performance, will eagerly comply with. And the others will range from reluctant compliance all the way through to ignorance that an applicable standard exists.
Standards are Not a Notation
Third, the Standard is not merely a set of symbols and notations that the diagram must comply with. The unqualified and inexperienced bridge builders may say it is, because of their low level of understanding of the entire set of knowledge required to build faultless bridges, but no. The Standard is always a methodology or set of explicit steps, which are prescribed for the process, which if adhered to, produce the decisions that need to be made at each step, in a progression, so that each decision can be based on previous decisions that have been confirmed, and that can be relied upon. A simple diagram progresses through prescribed standard-compliant stages or phases, with complexity and notations being progressively added, such that the final diagram is compliant.
Standards are Complete
The fourth issue has to do with ensuring that the information conveyed in a diagram is complete and unambiguous. The Standard ensures that the information required is complete. The exercise of the methodology means that ambiguities have been formally identified and resolved. Sub-standard diagrams do not include that requirement of essential Standard information, they are incomplete and contain ambiguities.
Standards are Easy
In addition to the confidence of achieving a certain level of quality, it is actually easier and faster to go through the standard methodology. It is absurd for the non-complaint companies to retro-fit their diagrams by merely supplying standard notation to them. The absence of the prescribed process is visible to any standard-aware person, and the diagram will conflicted (the components s lacking integration).
Responsible, aware customers (government departments, aircraft manufacturers ... companies that expect to be around in the next decade) have reasonable expectations that the software it purchases from suppliers will be of a certain quality; easy to enhance and extend; perform well; will integrate easily with other software; etc.
Lack of Standards in IT
The problem with the IT industry is, unlike the car manufacturing or bridge building industries, since it has exploded in the last 30 years, we have been flooded with providers who are:
- not educated in IT (do not know the formal steps required for the project)
- not qualified in IT (have no idea re what is right and wrong)
- not experienced in IT (they are experienced in what they know)
- unaware of Standards
- work in isolation from their qualified peers
- work in the comfort and ease, the isolation, of a single vendor's "products"
- have false confidence based on success in isolation
- Unskilled and Unaware of It
This has been the subject of much research and publications, it is not merely my professional opinion, the credit goes to the academics who did the hard work to sift through and identify exactly what the specific issues are.
So in terms of the whole population of IT providers, IT companies as well as IT employees in non-IT companies, the awareness of quality, of the standards required to provide quality, and their importance, is much lower than it was 30 years ago. It is a 'build and forget' mentality; if it doesn't work, throw it out and build another one. But for the big end of town, the responsible aware customers, that is not acceptable.
Standards are Not Single-Vendor
By definition, Standards are arrived at by multiple vendors, at the international level.
One huge problem in the industry is, in spite of having good vendors who supply good tools for real modelling (the resulting diagrams which comply with Standards), we also have vendors who supply a full range of absurd pictures and non-compliant diagrams. This allows IT people to produce good-looking but completely meaningless diagrams. The point is, these horrible little tools actually give people confidence, that they have built a good bridge, a good database. First they create a bunch of spreadsheets, which they load into a container called a "database" and the software helps them think that they now have a "database"; then they use a tool and reverse-engineer the "database" to produce a "data model". It gives them false confidence; they are unaware that they have a funny picture of a bucket of fish, and they feel offended if anyone points that out. Stick with the tools that are standard-compliant by declaration and certification, and toss those that aren't.
The single-vendor non-standard tools may give one comfort and ease, and a false sense of confidence, in isolation. But they cannot be used if one wants to achieve diagrams that convey all required info; confidence that is gained by acceptance of qualified peers; quality that is derived from a prescribed set of steps; confidence that one does not have to keep on reworking the model.
Conventions are Not Standards
And before anyone points out the the horrible tools are "de facto standards", no they aren't, they are common conventions, with no reference to Standards, and we should not confuse the two by using the word "standard" in reference to them. The way one gets out of bed and makes coffee is a convention, possibly very common, but it is not a "standard". Your common vendor, in their commercial interest, may have commercialised you into believing that there is only one "standard" coffee machine and one "standard" coffee bean, but that bears no relation to the Standards to which the coffee machine manufacturer must comply, or the Standard of coffee bean imported into the country.
There is the mis-quotation that MS is infamous for, comparing the progress of car industry to the "progress" of Microsoft, which the car industry responded to publicly, with justified indignation, and wiped the grin off Bill Gate's face. Sun Microsystems also responded, famously, but I doubt that is known in MS circles. Note that MS credibility is gained by sheer volume: the number of internet sites providing and exchanging ever-changing "information" among MS devotees. They are isolated from genuine qualifications and Standards, and falsely believe that single-vendor conventions, and partial performance, using nice-looking pictures, actually comprise "software".
Standards are Not Expensive
That does not mean you have to buy expensive tools. For small projects, it is quite acceptable to draw diagrams using simple drawing tools, because the compliance-to-standards is in the cranium, in the prescribed methodology, not in the tool, and therefore it is possible for a qualified, standards-aware person to produce standard-compliant drawings (for small projects) with any almost tool. And note that those horrible tools which misrepresent themselves do not provide the standard notation; the vast majority of "data models" and "entity relation diagrams" out there, are grossly sub-standard.
Standards re Relational Databases
Standards or precise definitions or specific guidelines, for the following have existed for over 30 years. In progressive order, each containing the previous:
Normalisation (for any Database)
(a Standard is not required, it is an engineering principle; common across many disciplines; a simple process for those qualified; and absence of it is easily identified.)
Relational Databases
The Relational Model: E F Codd & C J Date
The famous Twelve Rules of Relational Compliance
E F Codd
Relational Data Modelling
IDEF1X; 1980's; NIST Standard FIPS 184 of 1993
There are many suppliers who have practised these methodologies, as prescribed, thereby conforming to the Standards, for up to 30 years.
Note, there is only one Relational Data Modelling Standard, there is no conflict.
Note, the notation is just what you see on the surface, the result, however it does identify that other notations have info missing from them, and the underlying methodology was not followed.
Note well, that Normalisation pre-dated the Relational Model, and was taken as given; that is why the RM does not have specific references to Normalisation as a principle, and only identifies the Normal Forms, in terms of the requirement for Relational Databases.
If you are genuinely qualified as a Relational Database Modeller, you will be intimately familiar with the first three; if you are a standard-compliant Relational Database Modeller, you will be intimately familiar with the fourth. Again, you cannot reasonably expect to comply with the Standard merely by learning the <a href="http://www.softwa