Question
(A) An instructor Id. No. cannot be null, provided Instructor Id. No. being primary key.
(B) No two citizens have same Adhar-Id.
(C) Budget of a company must be zero.
a.
(A), (B) and (C) are true
b.
(A) false, (B) and (C) are true
c.
(A) and (B) are true; (C) false
d.
(A), (B) and (C) are false
Posted under UGC NET computer science question paper DBMS
Engage with the Community - Add Your Comment
Confused About the Answer? Ask for Details Here.
Know the Explanation? Add it Here.
Q. Integrity constraints ensure that changes made to the database by authorized users do not result into loss of data consistency. Which of the following statement(s) is (are) true...
Similar Questions
Discover Related MCQs
Q. Let M and N be two entities in an E-R diagram with simple single valued attributes. R1 and R2 are two relationships between M and N, whereas
R1 is one-to-many and R2 is many-to-many.
The minimum number of tables required to represent M, N, R1 and R2 in the relational model are ..........
View solution
Q. Consider a schema R(MNPQ) and functional dependencies M→N, P→Q. Then the decomposition of R into R1(MN) and R2(PQ) is _______
View solution
Q. If h is chosen from a universal collection of hash functions and is used to hash n keys into a table of size m, where n?m, the expected number of collisions involving a particular key x is less than ...................
View solution
Q. Which one is correct w.r.t. RDBMS?
View solution
Q. Let pk(R) denotes primary key of relation R. A many-to-one relationship that exists between two relations R1 and R2 can be expressed as follows:
View solution
Q. For a database relation R(A,B,C,D) where the domains of A,B,C and D include only atomic values, only the following functional dependencies and those that can be inferred from them are:
A→C
B→D
The relation R is in ................
View solution
Q. Consider the following relation:
Works (emp_name, company_name, salary)
Here, emp_name is primary key.
Consider the following SQL query:
Select emp_name
From Works T
where salary>(select avg (salary)
from Works S
where T.company_name=
S. Company_name)
The above query is for following:
View solution
Q. DBMS provides the facility of accessing data from a database through
View solution
Q. Relational database schema normalization is NOT for:
View solution
Q. Consider the following statements regarding relational database model:
(a) NULL values can be used to opt a tuple out of enforcement of a foreign key.
(b) Suppose that table T has only one candidate key. If Q is in 3NF, then it is also in BCNF.
(c) The difference between the project operator (P) in relational algebra and the SELECT keyword in SQL is that if the resulting table/set has more than one occurrences of the same tuple, then P will return only one of them, while SQL SELECT will return all.
One can determine that:
View solution
Q. Consider a database table R with attributes A and B. Which of the following SQL queries is illegal ?
View solution
Q. Which of the following statements is/are True regarding some advantages that an object-oriented DBMS (OODBMS) offers over a relational database?
I. An OODBMS avoids the “impedance mismatch” problem.
II. An OODBMS avoids the “phantom” problem.
III. An OODBMS provides higher performance concurrency control than most relational databases.
IV. An OODBMS provides faster access to individual data objects once they have been read from disk.
View solution
Q. The Global conceptual Schema in a distributed database contains information about global relations. The condition that all the data of the global relation must be mapped into the fragments, that is, it must not happen that a data item which belongs to a global relation does not belong to any fragment, is called :
View solution
Q. Consider the table R with attributes A, B and C. The functional dependencies that hold on R are : A → B, C → AB. Which of the following statements is/are True?
I. The decomposition of R into R1(C, A) and R2(A, B) is lossless.
II. The decomposition of R into R1(A, B) and R2(B, C) is lossy.
View solution
Q. Consider the following ORACLE relations:
One (x, y) = {<2, 5>, <1, 6>, <1, 6>, <1, 6>, <4, 8>, <4, 8>}
Two (x, y) = {<2, 55>, <1, 1>, <4, 4>, <1, 6>, <4, 8>, <4, 8>, <9, 9>, <1, 6>}
Consider the following two SQL queries SQ1 and SQ2:
SQ1 : SELECT * FROM One)
EXCEPT
(SELECT * FROM Two);
SQ2 : SELECT * FROM One)
EXCEPT ALL
(SELECT * FROM Two);
For each of the SQL queries, what is the cardinality (number of rows) of the result obtained when applied to the instances above?
View solution
Q. Which one of the following pairs is correctly matched in the context of database design?
List – I List – II
(Database term) (Definition)
I. Specialization A. Result of taking the union of two or more
disjoint (lower-level) entity sets to produce
a higher-level entity set.
II. Generalization B. Express the number of entities to which another
entity can be associated via a relationship set.
III. Aggregation C. Result of taking a subset of a higher-level
entity set to form a lower-level entity set.
IV. Mapping cardinalities D. An abstraction in which relationship sets (along
with their associated entity sets) are treated as
higher-level entity sets, and can participate in
relationships.
Codes :
I II III IV
View solution
Q. Consider a hash table of size m = 10000, and the hash function h(K)=floor(m(KAmod1)) for A = (√5 – 1)/2. The key 123456 is mapped to location ...............
View solution
Q. Which of the following statements concerning Object-Oriented databases is FALSE?
View solution
Q. In distributed databases, location transparency allows for database users, programmers and administrators to treat the data as if it is at one location. A SQL query with location transparency needs to specify:
View solution
Q. Consider the relations R(A,B) and S(B,C) and the following four relational algebra queries over R and S:
I. πA,B(R⋈S)
II. R⋈πB(S)
III. R∩(πA(R) Χ πB(S))
IV. πA,R.B(R Χ S) where R.B refers to the column B in table R.
One can determine that:
View solution
Suggested Topics
Are you eager to expand your knowledge beyond DBMS? We've curated a selection of related categories that you might find intriguing.
Click on the categories below to discover a wealth of MCQs and enrich your understanding of Computer Science. Happy exploring!