Bitemporal Modeling

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bitemporal Modeling is an information modeling technique designed to handle historical data along two different timelines. This makes it possible to rewind the information to "as it actually was" in combination with "as it was recorded" at some point in time. In order to able do so, information cannot be discarded even if it is erroneous. Within, for example, financial reporting it is often desirable to be able to recreate an old report both as it actually looked at the time of creation and as it should have looked given corrections made to the data after its creation.

Implementations of Bitemporal Modeling are mostly done using relational databases. As such, Bitemporal Modeling is considered different from Dimensional Modeling and complementary to database normalization. The upcoming SQL standard SQL:2011 will provide language constructs for working with bitemporal data. As no standard is yet in place, current solutions are vendor specific.

Philosophy

Bitemporal modeling uses bitemporal structures as the basic components. This results in the databases which have a consistent type of temporality for all data.

Benefits of Bitemporal Modeling

By focusing on completness and accuracy of data Bitemporal Modeling facilitates the creation of complete audit trails of data. Specifically this allows for queries which provide:

  1. The most accurate data possible as we know it now
  2. Data as we knew it at any point in time
  3. When and why the most accurate data we had changed
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.