Does the solution meet the goal?

Note: This question is part of a series of questions that present the same scenario. Each question in the series
contains a unique solution. Determine whether the solution meets the stated goals.
You have a database that contains a table named Employees. The table stores information about the
employees of your company.
You need to implement and enforce the following business rules:
Limit the values that are accepted by the Salary column.
Prevent salaries less than $15,000 and greater than $300,000 from being entered.
Determine valid values by using logical expressions.
Do not validate data integrity when running DELETE statements.
Solution: You implement a FOR UPDATE trigger on the table.
Does the solution meet the goal?

Note: This question is part of a series of questions that present the same scenario. Each question in the series
contains a unique solution. Determine whether the solution meets the stated goals.
You have a database that contains a table named Employees. The table stores information about the
employees of your company.
You need to implement and enforce the following business rules:
Limit the values that are accepted by the Salary column.
Prevent salaries less than $15,000 and greater than $300,000 from being entered.
Determine valid values by using logical expressions.
Do not validate data integrity when running DELETE statements.
Solution: You implement a FOR UPDATE trigger on the table.
Does the solution meet the goal?

A.
Yes

B.
No

Explanation:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/16081582/difference-between-for-update-of-and-for-update



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Żenada

Żenada

Explanation from link from answer is for Oracle databases, not for SQL Server.