Wednesday Feb 08

The Manga Guide to Databases Review

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If you’re looking for a magical fairy to help you learn databases, reality can only hit you with the next best thing: manga! Some people cringe at the sound of it. Others simply produce a questionable glance. In fact, very few people actually understand the term. For the people that know little about what I'm talking about--databases--the term can be intimidating and produce a wide variety of reactions. Thanks to No Starch Press and Ohmsha’s latest manga guide to academic topics,The Manga Guide to Databases, author Mana Takahashi and illustrator Shoko Asuma delivers a manga godsend to those lacking knowledge in the database department.

Though it initially only establishes story context and main characters, the guide soon after dives into the basics of databases. The plot brings the reader to the Land of Kod, a country with major exports and imports in fruits. The main characters, Princess Ruruna and her male attendant, Cain, open a book sent to them from Ruruna’s vacationing parents. In opening the book, a fairy named Tico becomes their magical guide to... you guessed it, databases! With the power of invisibility, Tico, Princess Ruruna, and Cain form a close bond as they zip through lessons on databases and minor side-plots related to love and proposals.

One of the smartest attributes of the book is the way the story twines together with the subject matter.  The Land of Kod has problems with keeping track of certain products, which makes their system of business less efficient. Tico, the cheerful database fairy, builds Princess Ruruna and Cain’s knowledge of databases around the current inefficient system, explaining the basics of data models down to the smallest detail. Anyone having problems creating a better system for their company or business could easily relate to any of the problems encountered by Princess Ruruna and the Land of Kod.

While learning databases, questions that would cross any database-challenged mind are inquired and answered by the characters in the guide. At the end of each session, practice exercises, a summary of the newly learned material, and steps to certain database formations end the chapter. Although the information in this guide is heavier and more difficult than other manga guides, it still beats out any other book on databases with its simplistic language, summative pages, and entertaining (but cliché) plot.

 

Bottom Line: 9 out of 10

All in all: If you need to learn about databases and you're tired of the Databases for Dummies-type fare, pick up this guide! If you plan on running your own business and are a manga fanatic, drop everything and pick up this guide!

Publishers:
Ohmsha (Japan), No Starch Press (US)

Author: Mana Takahashi

Illustrator: Shoko Asuma

 

             


Jd Banks
Written on Sunday, 22 March 2009 20:40 by Jd Banks

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