What is the reason for this?

View the Exhibit and examine the description of the EMPLOYEES table.
You want to display the EMPLOYE_ID, FIRST_NAME, and DEPARTMEN_ID for all
the employees who work in the same department and have the same manager as that of
the employee having EMPLOYE_ID 104. To accomplish the task, you execute the
following SQL statement:
SELECT employee_id, first_name, department_id
FROM employees
WHERE (manager_id, department_id) =(SELECT department_id, manager_id FROM
employees WHERE employee_id = 104)
AND employee_id <> 104;
When you execute the statement it does not produce the desired output. What is the
reason for this?

View the Exhibit and examine the description of the EMPLOYEES table.
You want to display the EMPLOYE_ID, FIRST_NAME, and DEPARTMEN_ID for all
the employees who work in the same department and have the same manager as that of
the employee having EMPLOYE_ID 104. To accomplish the task, you execute the
following SQL statement:
SELECT employee_id, first_name, department_id
FROM employees
WHERE (manager_id, department_id) =(SELECT department_id, manager_id FROM
employees WHERE employee_id = 104)
AND employee_id <> 104;
When you execute the statement it does not produce the desired output. What is the
reason for this?

A.
The WHERE clause condition in the main query is using the = comparison operator,
instead of EXISTS.

B.
The WHERE clause condition in the main query is using the = comparison operator,
instead of the IN operator.

C.
The WHERE clause condition in the main query is using the = comparison operator,
instead of the = ANY operator.

D.
The columns in the WHERE clause condition of the main query and the columns
selected in the subquery should be in the same order.



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