Hugh Darwen, C.J. Date, et al.
ICDT 2012
Assume that each object in a database has m grades, or scores, one for each of m attributes. For example, an object can have a color grade, that tells how red it is, and a shape grade, that tells how round it is. For each attribute, there is a sorted list, which lists each object and its grade under that attribute, sorted by grade (highest grade first). Each object is assigned an overall grade, that is obtained by combining the attribute grades using a fixed monotone aggregation function, or combining rule, such as min or average. In this overview, we discuss and compare algorithms for determining the top k objects, that is, k objects with the highest overall grades.
Hugh Darwen, C.J. Date, et al.
ICDT 2012
Joseph Y. Halpern, Ronald Fagin
PODC 1985
C.J. Date, Ronald Fagin
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS)
Alexandr Andoni, Ronald Fagin, et al.
SIGMOD 2008