In computing, the attribute domain is the set of values allowed in an attribute.[1]

For example:

Rooms in hotel (1–300)
Age (1–99)
Married (yes or no)
Nationality (Nepalese, Indian, American, or British)
Colors (Red, Yellow, Green)

For the relational model it is a requirement that each part of a tuple be atomic.[2] The consequence is that each value in the tuple must be of some basic type, like a string or an integer. For the elementary type to be atomic it cannot be broken into more pieces. Alas, the domain is an elementary type, and attribute domain the domain a given attribute belongs to an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of an entity.[clarification needed]

For example, in SQL, one can create their own domain for an attribute with the command

CREATE DOMAIN SSN_TYPE AS CHAR(9);

The above command says: "Create a datatype SSN_TYPE that is of character type with size 9".

References

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  1. ^ Levene, Mark; Loizou, George (1999), A Guided Tour of Relational Databases and Beyond, Springer, p. 72, ISBN 9781852330088.
  2. ^ Narang, Rajesh (2011), Database Management Systems, PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd., p. 70, ISBN 9788120343139.