Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Moving a Table from one table space to another
Inline views are nothing but sub queries used as tables. There is no difference in performance in using views that are edxplicitly created and inline views.
Example is given below:
SQL> create view v_emp as select EMPNO , ENAME , JOB , DEPTNO from scott.emp
2 ;
View created.
SQL> set autotrace on
SQL> select EMPNO , ENAME , JOB ,scott.dept.DEPTNO ,DNAME from v_emp ,scott.dept
2 where v_emp.deptno = scott.dept.deptno
3 ;
EMPNO ENAME JOB DEPTNO DNAME
---------- ---------- --------- ---------- --------------
7782 CLARK MANAGER 10 ACCOUNTING
7839 KING PRESIDENT 10 ACCOUNTING
7934 MILLER CLERK 10 ACCOUNTING
7369 SMITH CLERK 20 RESEARCH
7876 ADAMS CLERK 20 RESEARCH
7902 FORD ANALYST 20 RESEARCH
7788 SCOTT ANALYST 20 RESEARCH
7566 JONES MANAGER 20 RESEARCH
7499 ALLEN SALESMAN 30 SALES
7698 BLAKE MANAGER 30 SALES
7654 MARTIN SALESMAN 30 SALES
EMPNO ENAME JOB DEPTNO DNAME
---------- ---------- --------- ---------- --------------
7900 JAMES CLERK 30 SALES
7844 TURNER SALESMAN 30 SALES
7521 WARD SALESMAN 30 SALES
14 rows selected.
Execution Plan
----------------------------------------------------------
0 SELECT STATEMENT Optimizer=ALL_ROWS (Cost=6 Card=14 Bytes=47
6)
1 0 MERGE JOIN (Cost=6 Card=14 Bytes=476)
2 1 TABLE ACCESS (BY INDEX ROWID) OF 'DEPT' (TABLE) (Cost=2
Card=4 Bytes=52)
3 2 INDEX (FULL SCAN) OF 'PK_DEPT' (INDEX (UNIQUE)) (Cost=
1 Card=4)
4 1 SORT (JOIN) (Cost=4 Card=14 Bytes=294)
5 4 TABLE ACCESS (FULL) OF 'EMP' (TABLE) (Cost=3 Card=14 B
ytes=294)
Statistics
----------------------------------------------------------
8 recursive calls
0 db block gets
13 consistent gets
0 physical reads
0 redo size
986 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
508 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
2 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
1 sorts (memory)
0 sorts (disk)
14 rows processed
SQL> select EMPNO , ENAME , JOB ,scott.dept.DEPTNO ,DNAME from (select EMPNO , ENAME , JOB ,deptno FROM scott.emp) iv_emp ,scott.dept
2 where iv_emp.deptno = scott.dept.deptno;
EMPNO ENAME JOB DEPTNO DNAME
---------- ---------- --------- ---------- --------------
7782 CLARK MANAGER 10 ACCOUNTING
7839 KING PRESIDENT 10 ACCOUNTING
7934 MILLER CLERK 10 ACCOUNTING
7369 SMITH CLERK 20 RESEARCH
7876 ADAMS CLERK 20 RESEARCH
7902 FORD ANALYST 20 RESEARCH
7788 SCOTT ANALYST 20 RESEARCH
7566 JONES MANAGER 20 RESEARCH
7499 ALLEN SALESMAN 30 SALES
7698 BLAKE MANAGER 30 SALES
7654 MARTIN SALESMAN 30 SALES
EMPNO ENAME JOB DEPTNO DNAME
---------- ---------- --------- ---------- --------------
7900 JAMES CLERK 30 SALES
7844 TURNER SALESMAN 30 SALES
7521 WARD SALESMAN 30 SALES
14 rows selected.
Execution Plan
----------------------------------------------------------
0 SELECT STATEMENT Optimizer=ALL_ROWS (Cost=6 Card=14 Bytes=47
6)
1 0 MERGE JOIN (Cost=6 Card=14 Bytes=476)
2 1 TABLE ACCESS (BY INDEX ROWID) OF 'DEPT' (TABLE) (Cost=2
Card=4 Bytes=52)
3 2 INDEX (FULL SCAN) OF 'PK_DEPT' (INDEX (UNIQUE)) (Cost=
1 Card=4)
4 1 SORT (JOIN) (Cost=4 Card=14 Bytes=294)
5 4 TABLE ACCESS (FULL) OF 'EMP' (TABLE) (Cost=3 Card=14 B
ytes=294)
Statistics
----------------------------------------------------------
0 recursive calls
0 db block gets
11 consistent gets
0 physical reads
0 redo size
986 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
508 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
2 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
1 sorts (memory)
0 sorts (disk)
14 rows processed
SQL> set autotrace off
SQL> spool off
Except for the recursive calls we find that there is no much difference between the two execution plans.
Monday, December 20, 2004
Oracle Interview Question
1. To see current user name
Sql> show user;
2. Change SQL prompt name
SQL> set sqlprompt “Manimara > “
Manimara >
Manimara >
3. Switch to DOS prompt
SQL> host
4. How do I eliminate the duplicate rows ?
SQL> delete from table_name where rowid not in (select max(rowid) from table group by duplicate_values_field_name);
or
SQL> delete duplicate_values_field_name dv from table_name ta where rowid <(select min(rowid) from table_name tb where ta.dv=tb.dv); Example. Table Emp Empno Ename 101 Scott 102 Jiyo 103 Millor 104 Jiyo 105 Smith delete ename from emp a where rowid < ( select min(rowid) from emp b where a.ename = b.ename); The output like, Empno Ename 101 Scott 102 Millor 103 Jiyo 104 Smith
5. How do I display row number with records?
To achive this use rownum pseudocolumn with query, like SQL> SQL> select rownum, ename from emp;
Output:
1 Scott
2 Millor
3 Jiyo
4 Smith
6. Display the records between two range
select rownum, empno, ename from emp where rowid in
(select rowid from emp where rownum <=&upto minus select rowid from emp where rownum<&Start); Enter value for upto: 10 Enter value for Start: 7
ROWNUM EMPNO ENAME
--------- --------- ----------
1 7782 CLARK
2 7788 SCOTT
3 7839 KING
4 7844 TURNER
7. I know the nvl function only allows the same data type(ie. number or char or date Nvl(comm, 0)), if commission is null then the text “Not Applicable” want to display, instead of blank space. How do I write the query?
SQL> select nvl(to_char(comm.),'NA') from emp;
Output :
NVL(TO_CHAR(COMM),'NA')
-----------------------
NA
300
500
NA
1400
NA
NA
8. Oracle cursor : Implicit & Explicit cursors
Oracle uses work areas called private SQL areas to create SQL statements.
PL/SQL construct to identify each and every work are used, is called as Cursor.
For SQL queries returning a single row, PL/SQL declares all implicit cursors.
For queries that returning more than one row, the cursor needs to be explicitly declared.
9. Explicit Cursor attributes
There are four cursor attributes used in Oracle
cursor_name%Found, cursor_name%NOTFOUND, cursor_name%ROWCOUNT, cursor_name%ISOPEN
10. Implicit Cursor attributes
Same as explicit cursor but prefixed by the word SQL
SQL%Found, SQL%NOTFOUND, SQL%ROWCOUNT, SQL%ISOPEN
Tips : 1. Here SQL%ISOPEN is false, because oracle automatically closed the implicit cursor after executing SQL statements.
: 2. All are Boolean attributes.
11. Find out nth highest salary from emp table
SELECT DISTINCT (a.sal) FROM EMP A WHERE &N = (SELECT COUNT (DISTINCT (b.sal)) FROM EMP B WHERE a.sal<=b.sal);
Enter value for n: 2
SAL
---------
3700
12. To view installed Oracle version information
SQL> select banner from v$version;
13. Display the number value in Words
SQL> select sal, (to_char(to_date(sal,'j'), 'jsp'))
from emp;
the output like,
SAL (TO_CHAR(TO_DATE(SAL,'J'),'JSP'))
--------- -----------------------------------------------------
800 eight hundred
1600 one thousand six hundred
1250 one thousand two hundred fifty
If you want to add some text like,
Rs. Three Thousand only.
SQL> select sal "Salary ",
(' Rs. '|| (to_char(to_date(sal,'j'), 'Jsp'))|| ' only.'))
"Sal in Words" from emp
/
Salary Sal in Words
------- ------------------------------------------------------
800 Rs. Eight Hundred only.
1600 Rs. One Thousand Six Hundred only.
1250 Rs. One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty only.
14. Display Odd/ Even number of records
Odd number of records:
select * from emp where (rowid,1) in (select rowid, mod(rownum,2) from emp);
1
3
5
Even number of records:
select * from emp where (rowid,0) in (select rowid, mod(rownum,2) from emp)
2
4
6
15. Which date function returns number value?
months_between
16. Any three PL/SQL Exceptions?
Too_many_rows, No_Data_Found, Value_Error, Zero_Error, Others
17. What are PL/SQL Cursor Exceptions?
Cursor_Already_Open, Invalid_Cursor
18. Other way to replace query result null value with a text
SQL> Set NULL ‘N/A’
to reset SQL> Set NULL ‘’
19. What are the more common pseudo-columns?
SYSDATE, USER , UID, CURVAL, NEXTVAL, ROWID, ROWNUM
20. What is the output of SIGN function?
1 for positive value,
0 for Zero,
-1 for Negative value.
21. What is the maximum number of triggers, can apply to a single table?
12 triggers.
(The maximum number of triggers that can be applied to a table is unlimited but the number of types of triggers that we can apply on table may be 12)