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SQL Interview Questions With Answers

SQL Interview Questions With Answers

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views6 pages

SQL Interview Questions With Answers

SQL Interview Questions With Answers

Uploaded by

yogendra
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© © All Rights Reserved
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SQL Interview Questions with Answers

How do you implement one-to-one, one-to-many and many-to-many


relationships while designing tables?

One-to-One relationship can be implemented as a single table and


rarely as two tables with primary and foreign key relationships.
One-to-Many relationships are implemented by splitting the data into
two tables with primary key and foreign key relationships.
Many-to-Many relationships are implemented using a junction table with
the keys from both the tables forming the composite primary key of the
junction table.

What's the difference between a primary key and a unique key?

Both primary key and unique enforce uniqueness of the column on which
they are defined. But by default primary key creates a clustered index
on the column, where are unique creates a nonclustered index by
default. Another major difference is that, primary key doesn't allow
NULLs, but unique key allows one NULL only.

What are user defined datatypes and when you should go for them?

User defined datatypes let you extend the base SQL Server datatypes by
providing a descriptive name, and format to the database. Take for
example, in your database, there is a column called Flight_Num which
appears in many tables. In all these tables it should be varchar(8).
In this case you could create a user defined datatype called
Flight_num_type of varchar(8) and use it across all your tables.

Define candidate key, alternate key, composite key.

A candidate key is one that can identify each row of a table uniquely.
Generally a candidate key becomes the primary key of the table. If the
table has more than one candidate key, one of them will become the
primary key, and the rest are called alternate keys.

A key formed by combining at least two or more columns is called


composite key.

What are defaults? Is there a column to which a default can't be bound?

A default is a value that will be used by a column, if no value is


supplied to that column while inserting data. IDENTITY columns and
timestamp columns can't have defaults bound to them.

What is a transaction and what are ACID properties?

A transaction is a logical unit of work in which, all the steps must


be performed or none. ACID stands for Atomicity, Consistency,
Isolation, Durability. These are the properties of a transaction.
Explain different isolation levels

An isolation level determines the degree of isolation of data between


concurrent transactions. The default SQL Server isolation level is
Read Committed. Here are the other isolation levels (in the ascending
order of isolation): Read Uncommitted, Read Committed, Repeatable Read, Serializable.

What's the maximum size of a row?

8060 bytes. Don't be surprised with questions like 'what is the


maximum number of columns per table'. Check out SQL Server books
online for the page titled: "Maximum Capacity Specifications".

What is lock escalation?

Lock escalation is the process of converting a lot of low level locks


(like row locks, page locks) into higher level locks (like table
locks). Every lock is a memory structure too many locks would mean,
more memory being occupied by locks. To prevent this from happening,
SQL Server escalates the many fine-grain locks to fewer coarse-grain
locks. Lock escalation threshold was definable in SQL Server 6.5, but
from SQL Server 7.0 onwards it's dynamically managed by SQL Server.

What are constraints? Explain different types of constraints.

Constraints enable the RDBMS enforce the integrity of the database


automatically, without needing you to create triggers, rule or defaults.

Types of constraints: NOT NULL, CHECK, UNIQUE, PRIMARY KEY, FOREIGN KEY

Whar is an index? What are the types of indexes? How many clustered
indexes can be created on a table? I create a separate index on each
column of a table. what are the advantages and disadvantages of this
approach?

Indexes in SQL Server are similar to the indexes in books. They help
SQL Server retrieve the data quicker.

Indexes are of two types. Clustered indexes and non-clustered indexes.


When you craete a clustered index on a table, all the rows in the
table are stored in the order of the clustered index key. So, there
can be only one clustered index per table. Non-clustered indexes have
their own storage separate from the table data storage. Non-clustered
indexes are stored as B-tree structures (so do clustered indexes),
with the leaf level nodes having the index key and it's row locater.
The row located could be the RID or the Clustered index key, depending
up on the absence or presence of clustered index on the table.

If you create an index on each column of a table, it improves the


query performance, as the query optimizer can choose from all the
existing indexes to come up with an efficient execution plan. At the
same t ime, data modification operations (such as INSERT, UPDATE,
DELETE) will become slow, as every time data changes in the table, all
the indexes need to be updated. Another disadvantage is that, indexes
need disk space, the more indexes you have, more disk space is used.

What are the steps you will take to improve performance of a poor
performing query?

This is a very open ended question and there could be a lot of reasons
behind the poor performance of a query. But some general issues that
you could talk about would be: No indexes, table scans, missing or out
of date statistics, blocking, excess recompilations of stored
procedures, procedures and triggers without SET NOCOUNT ON, poorly
written query with unnecessarily complicated joins, too much
normalization, excess usage of cursors and temporary tables.

Some of the tools/ways that help you troubleshooting performance


problems are: SET SHOWPLAN_ALL ON, SET SHOWPLAN_TEXT ON, SET
STATISTICS IO ON, SQL Server Profiler, Windows NT /2000 Performance
monitor, Graphical execution plan in Query Analyzer.

What is a deadlock and what is a live lock? How will you go about
resolving deadlocks?

Deadlock is a situation when two processes, each having a lock on one


piece of data, attempt to acquire a lock on the other's piece. Each
process would wait indefinitely for the other to release the lock,
unless one of the user processes is terminated. SQL Server detects
deadlocks and terminates one user's process.

A livelock is one, where a request for an exclusive lock is


repeatedly denied because a series of overlapping shared locks keeps
interfering. SQL Server detects the situation after four denials and
refuses further shared locks. A livelock also occurs when read
transactions monopolize a table or page, forcing a write transaction
to wait indefinitely.

Check out SET DEADLOCK_PRIORITY and "Minimizing Deadlocks

What is blocking and how would you troubleshoot it?

Blocking happens when one connection from an application holds a lock


and a second connection requires a conflicting lock type. This forces
the second connection to wait, blocked on the first.

Read up the following topics in SQL Server books online: Understanding


and avoiding blocking, Coding efficient transactions.

What are cursors? Explain different types of cursors. What are the
disadvantages of cursors? How can you avoid cursors?

Cursors allow row-by-row processing of the result sets.

Types of cursors: Static, Dynamic, Forward-only, Keyset-driven. See


books online for more information.

Disadvantages of cursors: Each time you fetch a row from the cursor,
it results in a network roundtrip, where as a normal SELECT query
makes only one rowundtrip, however large the resultset is. Cursors are
also costly because they require more resources and temporary storage
(results in more IO operations). Furthere, there are restrictions on
the SELECT statements that can be used with some types of cursors.

What is a join and explain different types of joins.

Joins are used in queries to explain how different tables are related.
Joins also let you select data from a table depending upon data from
another table.

Types of joins: INNER JOINs, OUTER JOINs, CROSS JOINs. OUTER JOINs are
further classified as LEFT OUTER JOINS, RIGHT OUTER JOINS and FULL
OUTER JOINS.

For more information see pages from books online titled: "Join
Fundamentals" and "Using Joins".

Can you have a nested transaction?

Yes, very much. Check out BEGIN TRAN, COMMIT, ROLLBACK, SAVE TRAN and
@@TRANCOUNT

What is an extended stored procedure? Can you instantiate a COM object


by using T-SQL?

An extended stored procedure is a function within a DLL (written in a


programming language like C, C++ using Open Data Services (ODS) API)
that can be called from T-SQL, just the way we call normal stored
procedures using the EXEC statement. See books online to learn how to
create extended stored procedures and how to add them to SQL Server.

Yes, you can instantiate a COM (written in languages like VB, VC++)
object from T-SQL by using sp_OACreate stored procedure. Also see
books online for sp_OAMethod, sp_OAGetProperty, sp_OASetProperty,
sp_OADestroy. For an example of creating a COM object in VB and
calling it from T-SQL, see 'My code library' section of this site.

What is the system function to get the current user's user id?

USER_ID(). Also check out other system functions like USER_NAME(),


SYSTEM_USER, SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER, USER, SUSER_SID(),
HOST_NAME().

What are triggers? How many triggers you can have on a table? How to
invoke a trigger on demand?

Triggers are special kind of stored procedures that get executed


automatically when an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE operation takes place
on a table.

In SQL Server 6.5 you could define only 3 triggers per table, one for
INSERT, one for UPDATE and one for DELETE. From SQL Server 7.0
onwards, this restriction is gone, and you could create multiple
triggers per each action. But in 7.0 there's no way to control the
order in which the triggers fire. In SQL Server 2000 you could specify
which trigger fires first or fires last using sp_settriggerorder

Triggers can't be invoked on demand. They get triggered only when an


associated action (INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE) happens on the table on
which they are defined.

Triggers are generally used to implement business rules, auditing.


Triggers can also be used to extend the referential integrity checks,
but wherever possible, use constraints for this purpose, instead of
triggers, as constraints are much faster.

Till SQL Server 7.0, triggers fire only after the data modification
operation happens. So in a way, they are called post triggers. But in
SQL Server 2000 you could create pre triggers also. Search SQL Server
2000 books online for INSTEAD OF triggers.

Also check out books online for 'inserted table', 'deleted table' and
COLUMNS_UPDATED()

There is a trigger defined for INSERT operations on a table, in an


OLTP system. The trigger is written to instantiate a COM object and
pass the newly insterted rows to it for some custom processing. What
do you think of this implementation? Can this be implemented better?

Instantiating COM objects is a time consuming process and since you


are doing it from within a trigger, it slows down the data insertion
process. Same is the case with sending emails from triggers. This
scenario can be better implemented by logging all the necessary data
into a separate table, and have a job which periodically checks this
table and does the needful.

What is a self join? Explain it with an example.

Self join is just like any other join, except that two instances of
the same table will be joined in the query. Here is an example:
Employees table which contains rows for normal employees as well as
managers. So, to find out the managers of all the employees, you need
a self join.

CREATE TABLE emp


(
empid int,
mgrid int,
empname char(10)
)

INSERT emp SELECT 1,2,'Vyas'


INSERT emp SELECT 2,3,'Mohan'
INSERT emp SELECT 3,NULL,'Shobha'
INSERT emp SELECT 4,2,'Shridhar'
INSERT emp SELECT 5,2,'Sourabh'
SELECT t1.empname [Employee], t2.empname [Manager]
FROM emp t1, emp t2
WHERE t1.mgrid = t2.empid

Here's an advanced query using a LEFT OUTER JOIN that even returns the
employees without managers (super bosses)

SELECT t1.empname [Employee], COALESCE(t2.empname, 'No manager')


[Manager]
FROM emp t1
LEFT OUTER JOIN
emp t2
ON
t1.mgrid = t2.empid

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