Summary
The exercises in this chapter demonstrate what is required to transform a logical model into a deployable, physical design. However, before such transformation occurs, each project’s use case should be carefully considered. As there is no one-size-fits-all guideline for Snowflake databases, decisions must be made considering performance, cost, data integrity, security, and usability. However, unlike traditional databases, long-standing issues such as backup, recovery, and scalability are handled by Snowflake features and architecture.
Once the physical properties have been decided, users create physical equivalents of all logical objects, including many-to-many and subtype/supertype relationships, yielding a final set of physical tables. Following this, naming standards, database objects, columns, and their relationships are declared before deploying the resulting model.
Deployable Snowflake DDL code is produced from an ERD through a process called forward engineering...