Skip to main content

sample tables

 
--sample tables

DROP TABLE EMP;
DROP TABLE DEPT;
DROP TABLE BONUS;
DROP TABLE SALGRADE;
DROP TABLE DUMMY;
 
CREATE TABLE EMP
       (EMPNO NUMBER(4) NOT NULL,
        ENAME VARCHAR2(10),
        JOB VARCHAR2(9),
        MGR NUMBER(4),
        HIREDATE DATE,
        SAL NUMBER(7, 2),
        COMM NUMBER(7, 2),
        DEPTNO NUMBER(2));
 
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7369, 'SMITH',  'CLERK',     7902,
        TO_DATE('17-DEC-1980', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),  800, NULL, 20);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7499, 'ALLEN',  'SALESMAN',  7698,
        TO_DATE('20-FEB-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 1600,  300, 30);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7521, 'WARD',   'SALESMAN',  7698,
        TO_DATE('22-FEB-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 1250,  500, 30);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7566, 'JONES',  'MANAGER',   7839,
        TO_DATE('2-APR-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),  2975, NULL, 20);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7654, 'MARTIN', 'SALESMAN',  7698,
        TO_DATE('28-SEP-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 1250, 1400, 30);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7698, 'BLAKE',  'MANAGER',   7839,
        TO_DATE('1-MAY-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),  2850, NULL, 30);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7782, 'CLARK',  'MANAGER',   7839,
        TO_DATE('9-JUN-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),  2450, NULL, 10);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7788, 'SCOTT',  'ANALYST',   7566,
        TO_DATE('09-DEC-1982', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 3000, NULL, 20);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7839, 'KING',   'PRESIDENT', NULL,
        TO_DATE('17-NOV-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 5000, NULL, 10);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7844, 'TURNER', 'SALESMAN',  7698,
        TO_DATE('8-SEP-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),  1500,    0, 30);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7876, 'ADAMS',  'CLERK',     7788,
        TO_DATE('12-JAN-1983', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 1100, NULL, 20);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7900, 'JAMES',  'CLERK',     7698,
        TO_DATE('3-DEC-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),   950, NULL, 30);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7902, 'FORD',   'ANALYST',   7566,
        TO_DATE('3-DEC-1981', 'DD-MON-YYYY'),  3000, NULL, 20);
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES
        (7934, 'MILLER', 'CLERK',     7782,
        TO_DATE('23-JAN-1982', 'DD-MON-YYYY'), 1300, NULL, 10);
 
CREATE TABLE DEPT
       (DEPTNO NUMBER(2),
        DNAME VARCHAR2(14),
        LOC VARCHAR2(13) );
 
INSERT INTO DEPT VALUES (10, 'ACCOUNTING', 'NEW YORK');
INSERT INTO DEPT VALUES (20, 'RESEARCH',   'DALLAS');
INSERT INTO DEPT VALUES (30, 'SALES',      'CHICAGO');
INSERT INTO DEPT VALUES (40, 'OPERATIONS', 'BOSTON');
 
CREATE TABLE BONUS
        (ENAME VARCHAR2(10),
         JOB   VARCHAR2(9),
         SAL   NUMBER,
         COMM  NUMBER);
 
CREATE TABLE SALGRADE
        (GRADE NUMBER,
         LOSAL NUMBER,
         HISAL NUMBER);
 
INSERT INTO SALGRADE VALUES (1,  700, 1200);
INSERT INTO SALGRADE VALUES (2, 1201, 1400);
INSERT INTO SALGRADE VALUES (3, 1401, 2000);
INSERT INTO SALGRADE VALUES (4, 2001, 3000);
INSERT INTO SALGRADE VALUES (5, 3001, 9999);
 
CREATE TABLE DUMMY
        (DUMMY NUMBER);
 
INSERT INTO DUMMY VALUES (0);
 
COMMIT;
 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Oracle Merge Statement Delta Detection

The MERGE Syntax by Ajay Nerumati Delta Detection in Oracle SQL Posted on  8. October 2016 Delta detection is a common task in every Data Warehouse. It compares new data from a source system with the last versions in the Data Warehouse to find out whether a new version has to be created. There are several ways to implement this in Oracle. Your source system delivers a full extraction every night, and you have to load only the changed rows into your Core Data Warehouse? You receive incremental loads from another source system every few minutes, but only a few columns are loaded into the Data Warehouse. In all these situations, you need a delta detection mechanism to identify the rows that have to be inserted or updated in your Data Warehouse tables. In this blog post, I want to show different methods in Oracle SQL that provide the subset of rows of a source table that were changed since the last load. All these methods are set-based, i.e. they can be executed in one SQL sta...

RDBMS MINI PROJECT

  Capgemini class room training.   RDBMS MINI PROJECT ( SPRINT ) LIBRARY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM   Table of Contents Serial No. Topic Name Content Page No. 1.   Introduction 1.1 Setup checklist for mini project 3     1.2 Instructions 3 2.   Problem statement   2.1 Objective 4     2.2 Abstract of the project 4     2.3 Functional components of the project 4     2.4 Technology used 5 3.   Implementation in RDBMS LOT 3.1 Guidelines on the functionality to be built 6 4.   Evaluation 4.1 Evaluation 7   ...

PL / SQL practice programs

  PL / SQL  practice programs 1. Write a program to print the following format WELCOME TO PL/SQL PROGRAMMING   BEGIN   DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('WELCOME   TO   PL/SQL   PROGRAMMING'); END; /   2. Write a program to print the numbers from 1 to 100   DECLARE N NUMBER(3):=1; V VARCHAR2(1000); BEGIN WHILE N <=1000 LOOP V:=V||''||N; N:=N+1; END LOOP; DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(V); END; / 3. write a program to print the even numbers from 1 to 100 DECLARE N NUMBER(3):=0; BEGIN WHILE N <=100 LOOP N:=N+2; DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(N); END LOOP; END; / 4. Write a program to print the odd numbers from 1 to 100 DECLARE N NUMBER(3):=1; BEGIN WHILE N <=100 LOOP N:=N+2; DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(N); END LOOP; END; / 5. write a program for multiplication table DECLARE A NUMBER(2):=&A; B   NUMBER(2):=1; C ...