Evaluate the following SQL statements:
Exhibit:
You issue the following command to create a view that displays the IDs and last names of the sales staff in the
organization.
Exhibit:
Which two statements are true regarding the above view? (Choose two.)
A.
It allows you to update job IDs of the existing sales staff to any other job ID in the EMPLOYEES table
B.
It allows you to delete details of the existing sales staff from the EMPLOYEES table
C.
It allows you to insert rows into the EMPLOYEES table
D.
It allows you to insert IDs, last names, and job IDs of the sales staff from the view if it is used in multitable
INSERT statements
Notes on Updatable Views
An updatable view is one you can use to insert, update, or delete base table rows. You can create a view to be inherently updatable, or you can create an INSTEAD OF trigger on any view to make it updatable.
To learn whether and in what ways the columns of an inherently updatable view can be modified, query the USER_UPDATABLE_COLUMNS data dictionary view. The information displayed by this view is meaningful only for inherently updatable views. For a view to be inherently updatable, the following conditions must be met:
Each column in the view must map to a column of a single table. For example, if a view column maps to the output of a TABLE clause (an unnested collection), then the view is not inherently updatable.
The view must not contain any of the following constructs:
A set operator
a DISTINCT operator
An aggregate or analytic function
A GROUP BY, ORDER BY, MODEL, CONNECT BY, or START WITH clause
A collection expression in a SELECT list
A subquery in a SELECT list
A subquery designated WITH READ ONLY
Joins, with some exceptions, as documented in Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide
In addition, if an inherently updatable view contains pseudocolumns or expressions, then you cannot update base table rows with an UPDATE statement that refers to any of these pseudocolumns or expressions.
If you want a join view to be updatable, then all of the following conditions must be true:
The DML statement must affect only one table underlying the join.
For an INSERT statement, the view must not be created WITH CHECK OPTION, and all columns into which values are inserted must come from a key-preserved table. A key-preserved table is one for which every primary key or unique key value in the base table is also unique in the join view.
For an UPDATE statement, all columns updated must be extracted from a key-preserved table. If the view was created WITH CHECK OPTION, then join columns and columns taken from tables that are referenced more than once in the view must be shielded from UPDATE.
For a DELETE statement, if the join results in more than one key-preserved table, then Oracle Database deletes from the first table named in the FROM clause, whether or not the view was created WITH CHECK OPTION
With check option, you can delete but update or insert to base table