Which is the correct syntax to create a table with the following column specifications?

You need to create a table with the following column specifications:
1. Employee ID (numeric data type) for each employee
2. Employee Name, (character data type) which stores the employee name
3. Hire date, to store the date when the employee joined the organization
4. Status (character data type). It should contain the value if no data is entered.
5. Resume (character large object [CLOB] data type), which would contain the resume submitted by the employee
Which is the correct syntax to create this table?

You need to create a table with the following column specifications:
1. Employee ID (numeric data type) for each employee
2. Employee Name, (character data type) which stores the employee name
3. Hire date, to store the date when the employee joined the organization
4. Status (character data type). It should contain the value if no data is entered.
5. Resume (character large object [CLOB] data type), which would contain the resume submitted by the employee

Which is the correct syntax to create this table?

A.
CREATE TABLE EMP_1
(emp_id NUMBER(4),
emp_name VARCHAR2(25),
start_date DATE,
e_status VARCHAR2(10) DEFAULT ‘ACTIVE’,
resume CLOB(200));

B.
CREATE TABLE 1_EMP
(emp_id NUMBER(4),
emp_name VARCHAR2(25),
start_date DATE,
emp_status VARCHAR2(10) DEFAULT ‘ACTIVE’,
resume CLOB);

C.
CREATE TABLE 1_EMP
(emp_id NUMBER(4),
emp_name VARCHAR2(25),
start_date DATE,
emp_status VARCHAR2(10) DEFAULT “ACTIVE”,
resume CLOB);

D.
CREATE TABLE EMP_1
(emp_id NUMBER,
emp_name VARCHAR2(25),
start_date DATE,
emp_status VARCHAR2(10) DEFAULT ‘ACTIVE’,
resume CLOB);



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Denny

Denny

Some explanation:
A – not good because of CLOB(number)
B – not good because of incorrect tablename (cannot start with number)
C – not good because of incorrect default value (double quotes not allowed here)