ゞ沉默是金ゞ

          魚離不開水,但是沒有說不離開哪滴水.
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          DELETE

           

          The DELETE command is used to remove rows from a table. A WHERE clause can be used to only remove some rows. If no WHERE condition is specified, all rows will be removed. After performing a DELETE operation you need to COMMIT or ROLLBACK the transaction to make the change permanent or to undo it. Note that this operation will cause all DELETE triggers on the table to fire.

          SQL> SELECT COUNT(*FROM emp;

            
          COUNT(*)
          ----------
                  14

          SQL
          > DELETE FROM emp WHERE job = 'CLERK';

          4 rows deleted.

          SQL
          > COMMIT;

          Commit complete.

          SQL
          > SELECT COUNT(*FROM emp;

            
          COUNT(*)
          ----------
                  10

          TRUNCATE

           

          TRUNCATE removes all rows from a table. The operation cannot be rolled back and no triggers will be fired. As such, TRUCATE is faster and doesn't use as much undo space as a DELETE.

          SQL> TRUNCATE TABLE emp;

          Table truncated.

          SQL
          > SELECT COUNT(*FROM emp;

            
          COUNT(*)
          ----------
                   0

          DROP

           

          The DROP command removes a table from the database. All the tables' rows, indexes and privileges will also be removed. No DML triggers will be fired. The operation cannot be rolled back.

          SQL> DROP TABLE emp;

          Table dropped.

          SQL
          > SELECT * FROM emp;
          SELECT * FROM emp
                        
          *
          ERROR at line 
          1:
          ORA
          -00942table or view does not exist
          DROP and TRUNCATE are DDL commands, whereas DELETE is a DML command. Therefore DELETE operations can be rolled back (undone), while DROP and TRUNCATE operations cannot be rolled back.

           

          From Oracle 10g a table can be "undropped". Example:

           

          SQL> FLASHBACK TABLE emp TO BEFORE DROP;
          
          Flashback complete.

           

          PS: DROP and TRUNCATE are DDL commands, whereas DELETE is a DML command. As such, DELETE operations can be rolled back (undone), while DROP and TRUNCATE operations cannot be rolled back.


          1>TRUNCATE is a DDL command whereas DELETE is a DML command.

          2>TRUNCATE is much faster than DELETE.

          Reason:When you type DELETE.all the data get copied into the Rollback Tablespace first.then delete operation get performed.Thatswhy when you type ROLLBACK after deleting a table ,you can get back the data(The system get it for you from the Rollback Tablespace).All this process take time.But when you type TRUNCATE,it removes data directly without copying it into the Rollback Tablespace.Thatswhy TRUNCATE is faster.Once you Truncate you cann't get back the data.

          3>You cann't rollback in TRUNCATE but in DELETE you can rollback.TRUNCATE removes the record permanently.

          4>In case of TRUNCATE ,Trigger doesn't get fired.But in DML commands like DELETE .Trigger get fired.

          5>You cann't use conditions(WHERE clause) in TRUNCATE.But in DELETE you can write conditions using WHERE clause
          6>TRUNCATE command resets the High Water Mark for the table but DELETE does not. So after TRUNCATE the operations on table are much faster.

          posted on 2012-07-12 15:30 ゞ沉默是金ゞ 閱讀(704) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏 所屬分類: DB
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