Chapter 16. Triggers
Beginner
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16-1. | A trigger is a block of code (whether in PL/SQL, Java, or C) that fires, or executes, in response to a specific event. |
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16-2. | The statements are:
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16-3. | A trigger executes implicitly in response to an event, such as an update to a table. A procedure executes explicitly at the request of a user (or a call from another program). |
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16-4. | A trigger can have one of two modes: ENABLED (meaning that it fires normally) and DISABLED (meaning that it does not fire, even if its triggering event occurs). |
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16-5. | (b). A trigger that causes other triggers to fire is called a cascade. |
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16-6. | Statement-level triggers fire only one time per statement, and row-level triggers fire for each row that is affected by the DML statement. |
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16-7. | The WHEN clause causes a trigger to fire only when a specific set of user-defined conditions are met. |
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16-8. | Trigger (b) correctly populates the employee_id column. Trigger (a), which attempts to set the sequence number using an INSERT statement, illustrates a fairly common mistake. While Trigger (a) compiles successfully, it will probably produce the following error when it’s executed: ORA-00036: Maximum number of recursive sql ... |
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