1.Which of the following is not related to a Relational Database?
Answer: D. The options A, B and C are the major capabilities of the Oracle Relational Database.
2.Which of the following methods is used for writing a query with columns from multiple tables?
Answer: D. Joins are used to connect multiple tables and project column data from multiple tables in Oracle.
3.Which of the following is one of the most common methods to join multiple tables?
Answer: B. Equijoin is one of the types of joins which is the most common and simple technique for joining more than one tables. Equijoins are also called simple joins or inner joins.Equijoin involve primary key and foreign key.
4.Which of following will be used to join rows with other tables if the column values fall in a range defined by inequality operators?
Answer: C. Equijoins use equality operators to join rows, non-equijoins use inequality operators.
5.Which of the following statements is true about Oracle joins?
Answer: B. NULL values and differing entries in common join columns are excluded when joins are used.
6.Which of the following can be used to join the rows of a table with other rows of the same table?
Answer: D. The association is based on columns with logical and usually hierarchical relationships with each other.
7.What is true about a cartesian join of two tables in Oracle DB?
Answer: B. Cartesian join is often the result of missing or inadequate join conditions.It is simply the cross product of two tables.
8.Which of the following is one of the basic types of joins in Oracle DB ?
Answer: C. Equi-join and non-equijoin are the two basic types of joins in Oracle DB.
9.What is the main condition for using joins between a source table and a target table in Oracle DB for getting a non-cartesian product result?
Answer: B. The tables must be connected through a common column relating two entities.The table joined on a common column produce non Cartesian product.
10. Which of the following can be used to fetch rows from multiple tables in a single SQL query?
Answer: D. Equijoins are also called simple joins or inner joins. Equijoin involve primary key and foreign key.
11.What is true about the source table and the target table in terms of Oracle Joins?
Answer: D. The source and the target tables can be swapped and are not fixed at their positions.Depending of the type of join used in the query, the result may differ or remain same.
12.What is true about Natural joins in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. The keyword NATURAL JOIN instruct Oracle to identify columns with identical names between source and target tables. Natural joins use all columns with matching names and data types to join the tables. The USING clause can be used to specify only those columns that should be used for an equijoin.
13.Assume the tables EMPLOYEES and DEPARTMENT have to be joined using NATURAL JOIN. What is the difference between the following two queries which follow? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT department_id FROM employees NATURAL JOIN department WHERE first_name = 'John' AND last_name = 'Bacon';
SELECT department_id FROM department NATURAL JOIN employees WHERE first_name = 'John' AND last_name = 'Bacon';
Answer: B. The source and target tables can be swapped while using NATURAL JOIN giving relationally different result sets.
14.Which of the following options is true regarding the NATURAL JOIN in Oracle DB?
Answer: D. There's an implicit joining of the columns from the source and the target tables when a NATURAL JOIN is used. A NATURAL JOIN is a JOIN operation that creates an implicit join clause for you based on the common columns in the two tables being joined.Common columns are columns that have the same name in both tables.
15. What is the difference between a NATURAL JOIN and a join with JOIN..ON?
Answer: B, C. The join condition for the natural join is basically an equijoin of all columns with the same name.Use the ON clause to specify arbitrary conditions or specify columns to join.The join condition is separated from other search conditions. The ON clause makes code easy to understand.
16.What is true about the JOIN..ON clause in Oracle DB?
Answer: A, C. The join condition for the natural join is basically an equijoin of all columns with the same name. Use the ON clause to specify arbitrary conditions or specify columns to join. The join condition is separated from other search conditions. The ON clause makes code easy to understand.
17. The database designer has named the key (unique) columns from two tables differently.While joining these tables, which among the following will be the best practice?
Answer: A. Using NATURAL JOINS in this case can yield unexpected results as there is an implicit searching of columns with identical names which in this case is not present.
18.What of the following can be used to fetch non-matching rows along with the matching rows between a source and a target table in Oracle DB?
Answer: D. An outer join is created when records need to be included in the results without having corresponding records in the join tables. These records are matched with NULL records so that they're included in the output.
19. What are Cartesian Joins also known as in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. A Cartesian join between two tables returns every possible combination of rows from the tables. A Cartesian join can be produced by not including a join operation in the query or by using a CROSS JOIN.
20.What will be the result of a NATURAL JOIN between two tables EMPLOYEES and DEPARTMENT as given in the query below? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT * FROM employees NATURAL JOIN department;
Answer: C. The NATURAL JOIN keywords don't require a condition to establish the relationship between two tables. However, a common column must exist. Column qualifiers can't be used with the NATURAL JOIN keywords.
21.What is the difference between a NATURAL JOIN and an EQUI-JOIN in Oracle DB?
Answer: D. NATURAL JOIN joins all the columns with identical names whereas EQUI-JOIN requires the columns to be explicitly mentioned in the SQL query.
22.What is an INNER JOIN in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. A join can be an inner join, in which the only records returned have a matching record in all tables, or an outer join, in which records can be returned regardless of whether there's a matching record in the join.
23.What is the difference between a INNER JOIN and an EQUI-JOIN in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. EQUI-JOIN is a type of INNER JOIN containing "=" operator in a join condition, whereas the INNER JOIN can contain both equality as well non-equality operators
24.What is true about NATURAL JOINS in terms of ANSI SQL: 1999 syntaxes in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. ANSI SQL syntax is different from the traditional way of using (=) in the traditional ways. There are keywords like NATURAL JOIN etc. in the ANSI SQL syntax to distinguish the joins used.
25.What of the following is true with respect to the query given below? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT first_name, salary FROM employees e, departments d WHERE e.department_id (+) = d.department_id ;
Answer: A, D. The condition e.department_id (+) = d.department_id means it will perform a Right Outer Join and all the department_id s from the department table will be displayed whether they match or not
26.Which of the following syntax models is used in extensively in the software systems worldwide?
Answer: C. The ANSI SQL: 1999 syntax though not used as much as the traditional Oracle syntax, it still is one of the syntaxes that may be used in Oracle SQL
27.What of the following is true regarding the Cartesian product in Oracle DB?
Answer: A. A Cartesian join between two tables returns every possible combination of rows from the tables. A Cartesian join can be produced by not including a join operation in the query or by using a CROSS JOIN. A query must have at least (N-1) join conditions to prevent a cartesian product, where N is the number of tables in the query.
28.What is the reason of error in the following SQL query? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT first_name, last_name FROM employees, departments WHERE department_id (+) = department_id ;
Answer: D. Without the table aliases, Oracle is unable to derive the origin of the columns being joined and hence throws an Ambiguity error on execution.
29.Which of the following is used to avoid the ambiguous column problem in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. The syntax for removing the Ambiguous column issue is: table_alias.column_name
30.Which of the following is the most appropriate about the following query? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT employee_id , first_name, last_name FROM employees e right outer join department d On e.department_id = d.department_id ;
Answer: C. With the JOIN method for outer joins, you can add the LEFT, RIGHT, or FULL keywords. A left outer join includes all records from the table listed on the left side of the join, even if no match is found with the other table in the join operation. A full outer join includes all records from both tables, even if no corresponding record in the other table is found.
31.What will be the outcome of the following query? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT * FROM employees e, department d WHERE a.department_id = b.department_id ;
Answer: C. The same aliases should in the WHERE clause as declared in the FROM clause
32.Which of the following is true regarding the USING and ON clauses in table joins? (Choose more than one options if applicable)
Answer: A, D. The JOIN ... USING approach is similar to the NATURAL JOIN approach, except the common column is specified in the USING clause. A condition can't be included in the USING clause to indicate how the tables are related. In addition, column qualifiers can't be used for the common column specified in the USING clause. The JOIN... ON approach joins tables based on a specified condition. The JOIN keyword in the FROM clause indicates the tables to be joined, and the ON clause indicates how the two tables are related. This approach must be used if the tables being joined don't have a common column with the same name in each table.
33.How many tables can be joined by using the JOINS in Oracle DB?
Answer: D. There is currently no limit on the number of tables participating in a join.
34. What is true when multiple joins are used in an SQL statement?
Answer: A. When multiple-joins exist in a statement, they are evaluated from left to right.
35.What is true with respect to the following query? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
SELECT bonus, first_name, department_id FROM bonus b NATURAL JOIN employees e NATURAL JOIN department d;
Answer: C. The use of NATURAL JOINS can create Cartesian products of rows and also are error prone with non-dependable result sets.
36.What is true about the clauses JOIN..ON in Oracle DB?
Answer: B. The JOIN .... ON approach joins tables based on a specified condition. The JOIN keyword in the FROM clause indicates the tables to be joined, and the ON clause indicates how the two tables are related. This approach must be used if the tables being joined don't have a common column with the same name in each table.
Examine the table structures as given. Answer the questions 37 and 38 that follow the query given below:
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT e.salary, d.department_id FROM employees e JOIN department d On (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.last_name = 'Brandon');
37.What is true with respect to the query given above?
Answer: D. The WHERE clause can be omitted and the relevant conditions can be accommodated in the JOIN..ON clause itself as shown in the given query
38.With respect to the given query, if the JOIN used is replaced with NATURAL JOIN, it throws an error. What is the reason for this error?
Answer: C, D.
39.What is true about Non-equijoins in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. The non-equi joins are used with the JOIN..ON clause but with inequality operators.
Examine the structures of the tables EMPLOYEES and DEPARTMENTS as given and answer the questions 40 and 41 that follow.
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
40.What will be the outcome of the following query in Oracle DB?
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name, e.employee_id FROM employees e JOIN department d ON (e.salary BETWEEN 1000 AND 10000);
Answer: C.
41.You need to find a report which lists the first names and last names of the employees whose salary is greater than 20000 and who are located in any of the departments in the location Geneva. Which of the following queries will give the required results?
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) AND d.loc = upper ('Geneva');
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000);
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000) AND d.loc = 'Geneva';
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) WHERE d.loc = upper('Geneva');
Answer: A, C.
42.On which of the following conditions is a row returned when an EQUI-JOIN is used to join tables?
Answer: A. An equality join is created when data joining records from two different tables is an exact match (that is, an equality condition creates the relationship).The traditional approach uses an equal sign as the comparison operator in the WHERE clause. The JOIN approach can use the NATURAL JOIN, JOIN ... USING, or JOIN ... ON keywords.
41.You need to find a report which lists the first names and last names of the employees whose salary is greater than 20000 and who are located in any of the departments in the location Geneva. Which of the following queries will give the required results?
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) AND d.loc = upper ('Geneva');
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000);
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000) AND d.loc = 'Geneva';
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) WHERE d.loc = upper('Geneva');
Answer: A, C.
42.On which of the following conditions is a row returned when an EQUI-JOIN is used to join tables?
Answer: A. An equality join is created when data joining records from two different tables is an exact match (that is, an equality condition creates the relationship).The traditional approach uses an equal sign as the comparison operator in the WHERE clause. The JOIN approach can use the NATURAL JOIN, JOIN ... USING, or JOIN ... ON keywords.
41.You need to find a report which lists the first names and last names of the employees whose salary is greater than 20000 and who are located in any of the departments in the location Geneva. Which of the following queries will give the required results?
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) AND d.loc = upper ('Geneva');
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000);
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000) AND d.loc = 'Geneva';
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) WHERE d.loc = upper('Geneva');
Answer: A, C.
42.On which of the following conditions is a row returned when an EQUI-JOIN is used to join tables?
Answer: A. An equality join is created when data joining records from two different tables is an exact match (that is, an equality condition creates the relationship).The traditional approach uses an equal sign as the comparison operator in the WHERE clause. The JOIN approach can use the NATURAL JOIN, JOIN ... USING, or JOIN ... ON keywords.
41.You need to find a report which lists the first names and last names of the employees whose salary is greater than 20000 and who are located in any of the departments in the location Geneva. Which of the following queries will give the required results?
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) AND d.loc = upper ('Geneva');
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000);
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >=20000) AND d.loc = 'Geneva';
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id and e.salary >20000) WHERE d.loc = upper('Geneva');
Answer: A, C.
42.On which of the following conditions is a row returned when an EQUI-JOIN is used to join tables?
Answer: A. An equality join is created when data joining records from two different tables is an exact match (that is, an equality condition creates the relationship).The traditional approach uses an equal sign as the comparison operator in the WHERE clause. The JOIN approach can use the NATURAL JOIN, JOIN ... USING, or JOIN ... ON keywords.
43.What is true regarding a Self-Join in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. Self-joins are used when a table must be joined to itself to retrieve the data you need. Table aliases are required in the FROM clause to perform a self-join.
44. With respect to the query and the table structure given below,answer the question.
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT * FROM employees a join employees b WHERE a.employee_id = b.employee_id ;
Which of the following tables does Oracle treat as source table and target table?
Answer: A. The first occurrence of employees table is taken as source and the subsequent occurrences as b, c and so on.
45.In what scenarios can we use Self-Joins ideally in Oracle DB?
Answer: D.
46. What is true about NATURAL JOINS in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. The NATURAL JOIN keywords don't require a condition to establish the relationship between two tables. However, a common column must exist.Column qualifiers can't be used with the NATURAL JOIN keywords.
47.A report has to be extracted which gives the department name, department ID, department city and location ID only for departments 100 and 101. Using NATURAL JOINS, which of the following options will give the required results?
SELECT department_id , department_name ,location, city FROM departments NATURAL JOIN locations WHERE department_id in (100,101);
SELECT department_id , department_name ,location, city FROM locations NATURAL JOIN departments WHERE department_id BETWEEN 100 AND 101;
SELECT department_id , department_name ,location, city FROM departments NATURAL JOIN locations WHERE department_id >100 AND department_id >101;
SELECT department_id , department_name ,location, city FROM departments NATURAL JOIN locations ;
Answer: A. The WHERE can be used for additional conditions after the NATURAL JOIN clause.
48.In which of the following scenarios shall a USING clause or a NATURAL JOIN clause be used?
Answer: C, D. NATURAL JOINS and USING are mutually exclusive, the USING clause should be used to match only one column when more than one columns match.
49.Examine the table structures given. What will be the outcome of the following query? (Choose the most appropriate answer)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
SELECT e.name, b.bonus FROM employees e JOIN bonus b USING (job_id) WHERE e.job_id like 'SA%');
Answer: D. The column(s) used in the USING clause should not have a qualifier (table name or alias) anywhere in the SQL statement.
50.What is true with respect to INNER JOINS and OUTER JOINS in Oracle DB?
Answer: A, C. A join can be an inner join,in which the only records returned have a matching record in all tables,or an outer join, in which records can be returned regardless of whether there's a matching record in the join.An outer join is created when records need to be included in the results without having corresponding records in the join tables. These records are matched with NULL records so that they're included in the output.
51. What is true regarding FULL OUTER JOIN in Oracle DB?
Answer: D. A full outer join includes all records from both tables, even if no corresponding record in the other table is found.
Examine the given table structures and answer the questions 52 and 53 that follow.
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
52.Consider the following query.
SELECT e.job_id , e.first_name, d.department_id FROM departments D JOIN employees e JOIN BONUS b USING (job_id );
This query results in an error. What is the reason of the error?
Answer: A. Table1 JOIN table2 JOIN table3 is not allowed without the ON clauses for between each JOIN
53.You need to display all the non-matching rows from the EMPLOYEES table and the non-matching rows from the DEPARTMENT table without giving a Cartesian product of rows between them. Which of the following queries will give the desired output?
SELECT * FROM employees e, department d WHERE e.department_id = d.department_id ;
SELECT * FROM employees e NATURAL JOIN department d;
SELECT * FROM employees e FULL OUTER JOIN department d ON e.department_id = d.department_id ;
SELECT * FROM employees e JOIN department d ON ( e.department_id > d.department_id ) ;
Answer: C. The FULL OUTER JOIN returns the non-matched rows from both the tables. A full outer join includes all records from both tables, even if no corresponding record in the other table is found.
54.Which of the following ANSI SQL: 1999 join syntax joins are supported by Oracle?
Answer: D.
55.Which of the following is not a format for Outer Joins in Oracle DB?
Answer: C. Except 'Centre', rest 3 types are the types of formats of the Outer Joins in Oracle DB. With the JOIN method for outer joins, you can add the LEFT, RIGHT, or FULL keywords.
Examine the given table structures. Answer the questions 56, 57 and 58 that follow by referring to the following query:
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT * FROM employees e NATURAL JOIN department d;
56.You need to find the results obtained by the above query only for the departments 100 and 101. Which of the following clauses should be added / modified to the above query?
Answer: C. The NATURAL JOIN clause implicitly matches all the identical named columns. To add additional conditions the WHERE clause can be used.
57.You need to find the results obtained by the above query for all those employees who have salaries greater than 20000. Which of the following clauses should be added / modified to the above query?
Answer: D.
58.If the NATURAL JOIN in the above query is replaced by only JOIN which of the following should be added / modified to the above query to give the results pertaining to Department 100?
Answer: D. The equi-joins can be added for more conditions after the ON clause.
59.A report has to be extracted to get the Managers for all the employees in the departments 10 and 20 of a company 'ABC'. Which of the following queries will give the required results? (Consider the table structure as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT a.first_name || ' '||a.last_name "Manager", b.first_name||' '||b.last_name "Employees" FROM employees a join employees b On (employee_id );
SELECT a.first_name || ' '||a.last_name "Manager", b.first_name||' '||b.last_name "Employees" FROM employees a join employees b On (b.employee_id = a.employee_id );
SELECT a.first_name || ' '||a.last_name "Manager", b.first_name||' '||b.last_name "Employees" FROM employees a join employees b On (a.manager_id = b.employee_id ) WHERE department_id in (10,20);
SELECT a.first_name || ' '||a.last_name "Manager", b.first_name||' '||b.last_name "Employees" FROM employees a join employees b On (a.manager_id = b.employee_id ) WHERE a.department_id in (10,20);
Answer: D. The option C is incorrect because the non-aliased department_id in the WHERE clause will throw an error.
60.Which of the following queries will give results without duplicate values between the two tables EMPLOYEES and DEPARTMENT? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SELECT * FROM employees e NATURAL JOIN department d;
SELECT * FROM employees e JOIN department d;
SELECT * FROM employees e NATURAL JOIN department d USING (e.department_id );
SELECT * FROM employees e FULL OUTER JOIN department d USING (department_id );
Answer: D. The FULL OUTER JOIN will give all the matching as well non-matching rows from both the tables excluding duplicate values.
Examine the structures for the tables as given here and answer the questions 61 to 64.
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
SQL> desc locations Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- LOCATION_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) STREET_ADDRESS VARCHAR2(40) POSTAL_CODE VARCHAR2(12) CITY NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) STATE_PROVINCE VARCHAR2(25) COUNTRY_ID CHAR(2)
SQL> desc locations Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- LOCATION_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) STREET_ADDRESS VARCHAR2(40) POSTAL_CODE VARCHAR2(12) CITY NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) STATE_PROVINCE VARCHAR2(25) COUNTRY_ID CHAR(2)
61.What is true about the following query? (Choose the most appropriate answer)
SELECT * FROM bonus b, employees e WHERE b.job_id (+) = e.job_id ;
Answer: B. The (+) is on the LHS of the equation means it is a RIGHT OUTER JOIN and vice versa.
62.You have to list all the departments who have no employees yet in a company named 'XYZ'. Which of the following queries will give you the required results?
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM departments d NATURAL JOIN employees e;
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM employees e JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id );
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM employees e LEFT OUTER JOIN departments d USING (department_id );
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM employees e RIGHT OUTER JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id );
Answer: D.
63.You need to extract a report which displays 'No department yet' for all those employees who are yet to be allocated to a department. Which of the following will fulfill the purpose?
SELECT nvl(department_id ,'No department yet') FROM employees e RIGHT OUTER JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id );
SELECT nvl(department_id ,'No department yet') FROM departments d LEFT OUTER JOIN employees e ON (e.department_id = d.department_id );
SELECT nvl(department_id ,'No department yet') FROM employees e LEFT OUTER JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id );
SELECT nvl(department_id ,'No department yet') FROM employees e FULL OUTER JOIN departments d ON (e.department_id = d.department_id );
Answer: C.
64.You need to extract a report which displays all the departments which have not been assigned to a city yet. Which of the following queries will give you the required output?
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM departments d NATURAL JOIN locations l;
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM departments d FULL OUTTER JOIN locations l ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
SELECT d.department_id , d.department_name FROM departments d JOIN locations l USING (location_id);
SELECT department_id , department_name FROM departments d LEFT OUTER JOIN locations l ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
Answer: D.
65.In which two cases an OUTER JOIN should be used?
Answer: A, D. An outer join is created when records need to be included in the results without having corresponding records in the join tables. These records are matched with NULL records so that they're included in the output.
66.You need to find the salary grade obtained by each employee. Which of the following query will you use? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc grade Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- GRADE NUMBER LOSAL NUMBER HISAL NUMBER
SELECT employee_id , salary, grade FROM employees e JOIN grade g ON g.grade BETWEEN g.losal AND g.hisal
SELECT employee_id , salary, grade FROM employees e FULL OUTER JOIN grade g WHERE g.grade > g.losal AND < g.hisal;
SELECT employee_id , salary, grade FROM employees e JOIN grade g ON (MIN(g.grade) = g.losal AND MAX(g.grade) = g.hisal);
Answer: A.
67.Examine the table structures given.
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
Evaluate this SQL statement:
SELECT e.employee_id , (.25* e.salary) + (.5 * e.commission_pct) + (.75 * b.bonus) as calc_val FROM employees e, bonus b WHERE e.employee_id = b.employee_id ;
What will happen if you remove all the parentheses from the calculation?
Answer: C.
68.Consider the exhibit and examine the structures of the EMPLOYEES, DEPARTMENTS, and GRADE tables. For which situation would you use a non-equijoin query?
Answer: A. A non-equality join establishes a relationship based on anything other than an equal condition. Range values used with non-equality joins must be mutually exclusive.
69.In which three cases would you use the USING clause? (Choose three.)
Answer: C, D. The JOIN .... USING approach is similar to the NATURAL JOIN approach, except the common column is specified in the USING clause. A condition can't be included in the USING clause to indicate how the tables are related. In addition, column qualifiers can't be used for the common column specified in the USING clause.
70.If the tables EMPLOYEES and BONUS have two columns with identical names viz: - SALARY and JOB_ID, which of the following queries are equivalent to each other? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
SELECT * FROM employees E JOIN bonus B on (salary, job_id )
SELECT * FROM employees E NATURAL JOIN bonus B on (salary, job_id )
SELECT * FROM employees E JOIN bonus B USING (salary, job_id )
SELECT * FROM employees E JOIN bonus B on (salary, job_id )
Answer: B, C.
71.Examine the table structures as given.
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
Examine the following two SQL statements:
Query 1SELECT first_name,department_id FROM employees E JOIN departments D USING (department_id );Query 2
SELECT first_name,department_id FROM employees E NATURAL JOIN departments D USING (department_id );
Which statement is true regarding the outcome?
Answer: D.
72.You need to generate a report showing the department location along with the employee name for all hires made before 20th January, 2013.
You issue the following query:
SELECT department_name , first_name||' '||last_name FROM employees E JOIN department d ON ( hire_date < '20-JAN-2013') JOIN locations L ON (l.location_id = d.location_id) ;
Which statement is true regarding the above query?
Answer: B.
73.Examine the structure of the EMPLOYEES table:
You want to find out if any employee' details have been entered more than once using different EMPLOYEE_ID , by listing all the duplicate names. Which method can you use to get the required result?
Answer: A. Self-joins are used when a table must be joined to itself to retrieve the data you need. Table aliases are required in the FROM clause to perform a self-join.
Examine the structure of the tables DEPARTMENTS and LOCATIONS and answer the questions 74 and 75 that follow.
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc locations Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- LOCATION_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) STREET_ADDRESS VARCHAR2(40) POSTAL_CODE VARCHAR2(12) CITY NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) STATE_PROVINCE VARCHAR2(25) COUNTRY_ID CHAR(2)
74.You need to find out the departments that have not been allocated any location. Which query would give the required result?
SELECT d.department_id , d.department_name FROM departments d JOIN locations l ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
SELECT d.department_id , d.department_name FROM departments d RIGHT OUTER JOIN locations l ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
SELECT d.department_id , d.department_name FROM departments d FULL JOIN locations l ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
SELECT d.department_id , d.department_name FROM departments d LEFT OUTER JOIN locations l ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
Answer: B.
75.You want to list all departments that are not located in any location along with the department name. Evaluate the following query:
SELECT d.department_id , d.department_name ,l.location_id, l.city FROM departments D __________________ location L ON (d.location_id = l.location_id);
Which two JOIN options can be used in the blank in the above query to give the correct output?
Answer: A, C.
76. You need to generate a report that shows all department IDs, with corresponding employees (if any) and bonus details (if any), for all employees. Which FROM clause gives the required result? (Consider the table structures as given)
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> desc bonus Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2)
Answer: A.
77. Examine the following exhibits:
You want to generate a report listing the employees' IDs and their corresponding commissions and departments (if any), if the commissions exist or not. Evaluate the following query:
SELECT e.employee_id , bonus, department_name FROM bonus b_____________ employees USING (job_id ) ____________ departments USING (department_id ) WHERE commission_pct IS NOT NULL;
Which combination of joins used in the blanks in the above query gives the correct output?
Answer: A.
78.Predict the outcome of the following query.
SELECT e.salary, bonus FROM employees E JOIN bonus b USING (salary,job_id );
Answer: D.
View the Exhibit and examine the structure of the EMPLOYEES, DEPARTMENTS, LOCATIONS and BONUS. Answer the questions from 79 and 80 that follow:
79.You need to list all the departments in the city of Zurich. You execute the following query:
SELECT D.DEPARTMENT_ID , D.DEPARTMENT_NAME , L.CITY FROM departments D JOIN LOCATIONS L USING (LOC_ID,CITY) WHERE L.CITY = UPPER('ZURICH');
Predict the outcome of the above query.
Answer: D. Only the matching column names should be used in the USING clause.
80.Answer the question that follows the query given below:
SELECT e.first_name, d.department_id , e.salary, b.bonus FROM bonus b join employees e USING (job_id ) JOIN department d USING (department_id ) WHERE d.loc = 'Zurich';
You need to extract a report which gives the first name, department number, salary and bonuses of the employees of a company named 'ABC'. Which of the following queries will solve the purpose?
SELECT e.first_name, d.department_id , e.salary, b.bonus FROM bonus b join employees e join departments d on (b.job_id = e.job_id ) on (e.department_id =d.department_id ) WHERE d.loc = 'Zurich';
SELECT e.first_name, d.department_id , e.salary, b.bonus FROM bonus b join employees e on (b.job_id = e.job_id ) JOIN department d on (e.department_id =d.department_id ) WHERE d.loc = 'Zurich';
SELECT e.first_name, d.department_id , e.salary, b.bonus FROM employees e join bonus b USING (job_id ) JOIN department d USING (department_id ) WHERE d.loc = 'Zurich';
Answer: C. The query A will throw a syntactical error, query B will throw an invalid identifier error between bonus and department.
Examine the Exhibits given below and answer the questions 81 to 85 that follow.
81. You need to find the managers' name for those employees who earn more than 20000. Which of the following queries will work for getting the required results?
SELECT e.employee_id "Employee", salary, employee_id , FROM employees E JOIN employees M USING (e.manager_id = m.employee_id ) WHERE e.salary >20000;
SELECT e.employee_id "Employee", salary, employee_id , FROM employees E JOIN employees M USING (e.manager_id) WHERE e.salary >20000;
SELECT e.employee_id "Employee", salary, employee_id , FROM employees E NATURAL JOIN employees M USING (e.manager_id = m.employee_id ) WHERE e.salary >20000;
SELECT e.employee_id "Employee", salary, employee_id , FROM employees E JOIN employees M ON (e.manager_id = m.employee_id ) WHERE e.salary >20000;
Answer: D.
82.You issue the following query:
SELECT e.employee_id ,d.department_id FROM employees e NATURAL JOIN department d NATURAL JOIN bonus b WHERE department_id =100;
Which statement is true regarding the outcome of this query?
Answer: C.
83.You want to display all the employee names and their corresponding manager names. Evaluate the following query:
SELECT e.first_name "EMP NAME", m.employee_name "MGR NAME" FROM employees e ______________ employees m ON e.manager_id = m.employee_id ;
Which JOIN option can be used in the blank in the above query to get the required output?
Answer: C. A left outer join includes all records from the table listed on the left side of the join, even if no match is found with the other table in the join operation.
Consider the below exhibit and following query to answer questions 84 and 85. (Assume the table department has manager_id and department_name as its columns)
Select * FROM employees e JOIN department d ON (e.employee_id = d.manager_id);
84. You need to display a sentence "(first_name) (last_name) is manager of the (department_name) department". Which of the following SELECT statements will successfully replace '*' in the above query to fulfill this requirement?
SELECT e.first_name||' '||e.last_name||' is manager of the '||d.department_name||' department.' "Managers"
SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name||' is manager of the '||d.department_name||' department.' "Managers"
SELECT e.last_name||' is manager of the '||d.department_name||' department.' "Managers"
Answer: A.
85.What will happen if we omit writing the braces "( )" after the ON clause in the above query?
Answer: B. The braces are not mandatory, but using them provides a clear readability of the conditions within it.
86. Which of the following queries creates a Cartesian join?
SELECT title, authorid FROM books, bookauthor;
SELECT title, name FROM books CROSS JOIN publisher;
SELECT title, gift FROM books NATURAL JOIN promotion;
Answer: A, B. A Cartesian join between two tables returns every possible combination of rows from the tables. A Cartesian join can be produced by not including a join operation in the query or by using a CROSS JOIN.
87. Which of the following operators is not allowed in an outer join?
Answer: C. Oracle raises the exception "ORA-01719: outer join operator (+) not allowed in operand of OR or IN"
88. Which of the following queries contains an equality join?
SELECT title, authorid FROM books, bookauthor WHERE books.isbn = bookauthor.isbn AND retail > 20;
SELECT title, name FROM books CROSS JOIN publisher;
SELECT title, gift FROM books, promotion WHERE retail >= minretail AND retail <= maxretail;
Answer: A. An equality join is created when data joining records from two different tables is an exact match (that is, an equality condition creates the relationship).
89. Which of the following queries contains a non-equality join?
SELECT title, authorid FROM books, bookauthor WHERE books.isbn = bookauthor.isbn AND retail > 20;
SELECT title, name FROM books JOIN publisher USING (pubid);
SELECT title, gift FROM books, promotion WHERE retail >= minretail AND retail <= maxretail;
Answer: D. Nonequijoins match column values from different tables based on an inequality expression. The value of the join column in each row in the source table is compared to the corresponding values in the target table. A match is found if the expression used in the join, based on an inequality operator, evaluates to true. When such a join is constructed, a nonequijoin is performed.A nonequijoin is specified using the JOIN..ON syntax, but the join condition contains an inequality operator instead of an equal sign.
90. The following SQL statement contains which type of join?
SELECT title, order#, quantity FROM books FULL OUTER JOIN orderitems ON books.isbn = orderitems.isbn;
Answer: D. A full outer join includes all records from both tables, even if no corresponding record in the other table is found.
91. Which of the following queries is valid?
SELECT b.title, b.retail, o.quantity FROM books b NATURAL JOIN orders od NATURAL JOIN orderitems o WHERE od.order# = 1005;
SELECT b.title, b.retail, o.quantity FROM books b, orders od, orderitems o WHERE orders.order# = orderitems.order# AND orderitems.isbn=books.isbn AND od.order#=1005;
SELECT b.title, b.retail, o.quantity FROM books b, orderitems o WHERE o.isbn = b.isbn AND o.order#=1005;
Answer: C. If tables in the joins have alias, the selected columns must be referred with the alias and not with the actual table names.
92. Given the following query.
SELECT zip, order# FROM customers NATURAL JOIN orders;
Which of the following queries is equivalent?
SELECT zip, order# FROM customers JOIN orders WHERE customers.customer# = orders.customer#;
SELECT zip, order# FROM customers, orders WHERE customers.customer# = orders.customer#;
SELECT zip, order# FROM customers, orders WHERE customers.customer# = orders.customer# (+);
Answer: B. Natural join instructs Oracle to identify columns with identical names between the source and target tables.
93. Examine the table structures as given. Which line in the following SQL statement raises an error?
SQL> DESC employees Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- EMPLOYEE_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(6) FIRST_NAME VARCHAR2(20) LAST_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) EMAIL NOT NULL VARCHAR2(25) PHONE_NUMBER VARCHAR2(20) HIRE_DATE NOT NULL DATE JOB_ID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(10) SALARY NUMBER(8,2) COMMISSION_PCT NUMBER(2,2) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)
SQL> DESC departments Name Null? Type ----------------------- -------- ---------------- DEPARTMENT_ID NOT NULL NUMBER(4) DEPARTMENT_NAME NOT NULL VARCHAR2(30) MANAGER_ID NUMBER(6) LOCATION_ID NUMBER(4)
1. SELECT e.first_name, d.department_name 2. FROM employees e, department d 3. WHERE e.department_id=d.department_id
Answer: A. If a query uses alias names in the join condition, their column should use the alias for reference.
94. Given the following query:
SELECT lastname, firstname, order# FROM customers LEFT OUTER JOIN orders USING (customer#) ORDER BY customer#;
Which of the following queries returns the same results?
SELECT lastname, firstname, order# FROM customers c OUTER JOIN orders o ON c.customer# = o.customer# ORDER BY c.customer#;
SELECT lastname, firstname, order# FROM orders o RIGHT OUTER JOIN customers c ON c.customer# = o.customer# ORDER BY c.customer#;
SELECT lastname, firstname, order# FROM customers c, orders o WHERE c.customer# = o.customer# (+) ORDER BY c.customer#;
Answer: B, C.
95. Which of the below statements are true?
Answer: C. Group functions can be used on a query using Oracle joins. Ambiguous columns must be referenced using a qualifier.
96. Which line in the following SQL statement raises an error?
1. SELECT name, title 2. FROM books JOIN publisher 3. WHERE books.pubid = publisher.pubid 4. AND 5. cost < 45.95
Answer: C. Since the tables are joined using JOIN keyword, the equality condition should be written with the USING clause and not WHERE clause.
97. Given the following query:
SELECT title, gift FROM books CROSS JOIN promotion;
Which of the following queries is equivalent?
SELECT title, gift FROM books NATURAL JOIN promotion;
SELECT title FROM books INTERSECT SELECT gift FROM promotion;
SELECT title FROM books UNION ALL SELECT gift FROM promotion;
SELECT title, gift FROM books, promotion;
Answer: D. Cartesian joins are same as Cross joins.
98. If the CUSTOMERS table contains seven records and the ORDERS table has eight records, how many records does the following query produce?
SELECT * FROM customers CROSS JOIN orders;
Answer: B. Cross join is the cross product of rows contained in the two tables.
99. Which of the following SQL statements is not valid?
SELECT b.isbn, p.name FROM books b NATURAL JOIN publisher p;
SELECT isbn, name FROM books b, publisher p WHERE b.pubid = p.pubid;
SELECT isbn, name FROM books b JOIN publisher p ON b.pubid = p.pubid;
SELECT isbn, name FROM books JOIN publisher USING (pubid);
Answer: A. Ambiguous columns must be referred with the table qualifiers.
100. Which of the following lists all books published by the publisher named 'Printing Is Us'?
SELECT title FROM books NATURAL JOIN publisher WHERE name = 'PRINTING IS US';
SELECT title FROM books, publisher WHERE pubname = 1;
SELECT * FROM books b, publisher p JOIN tables ON b.pubid = p.pubid WHERE name = 'PRINTING IS US';
Answer: A. Assuming that the column NAME is not contained in BOOKS table, query A is valid.
101. Which of the following SQL statements is not valid?
SELECT isbn FROM books MINUS SELECT isbn FROM orderitems;
SELECT isbn, name FROM books, publisher WHERE books.pubid (+) = publisher.pubid (+);
SELECT title, name FROM books NATURAL JOIN publisher
Answer: B. The query B raises an exception "ORA-01468: a predicate may reference only one outer-joined table".
102. Which of the following statements about an outer join between two tables is true?
Answer: B.
103. Which line in the following SQL statement raises an error?
1. SELECT name, title 2. FROM books b, publisher p 3. WHERE books.pubid = publisher.pubid 4. AND 5. (retail > 25 OR retail-cost > 18.95);
Answer: B. Since the tables used in the query have a qualifier, the columns must be referred using the same.
104. What is the maximum number of characters allowed in a table alias?
Answer: D. The table alias can be maximum of 30 characters.
105. Which of the following SQL statements is valid?
SELECT books.title, orderitems.quantity FROM books b, orderitems o WHERE b.isbn= o.ibsn;
SELECT title, quantity FROM books b JOIN orderitems o;
SELECT books.title, orderitems.quantity FROM books JOIN orderitems ON books.isbn = orderitems.isbn;
Answer: C.