- Java is a high-level programming language originally developed by Sun Microsystems and released in 1995. It runs on a variety of platforms such as Windows, Mac OS, and UNIX.
- The Java Virtual Machine (JVM) allows Java code to run on different platforms, as the bytecode is interpreted by the JVM rather than being compiled into platform-specific machine code.
- Some key features of Java include being object-oriented, platform independent, robust, interpreted, and multi-threaded.
EEE oops Vth semester viva questions with answerJeba Moses
1. An object is the basic unit of object-oriented programming and represents an instance of a class. Objects have unique names and can hold their own data.
2. A class defines a collection of similar objects. Instances are objects created from classes through a process called instantiation.
3. Object-oriented programming organizes programs around objects and a set of well-defined interfaces to access object data. Data is encapsulated within classes and accessed through member functions.
The document contains summaries of various SQL concepts and interview questions. It defines the differences between CHAR and VARCHAR2 data types, DROP and TRUNCATE commands, CROSS JOIN and NATURAL JOIN. It also summarizes query optimization, triggers, group functions, inserting NULL values, recursive stored procedures, executing dynamic SQL, aggregate and scalar functions, selecting unique records, fetching string characters, collation, auto-increment, and data warehouses.
Data Structure Interview Questions & AnswersSatyam Jaiswal
Practice Best Data Structure Interview Questions & Answers for the best preparation of the Data Structure Interview. These Interview Questions are very popular and asked various times to Data Structure Interveiw.
The document provides information about Java interview questions for freshers, including questions about why Java is platform independent, why Java is not 100% object-oriented, different types of constructors in Java, why pointers are not used in Java, the difference between arrays and array lists, what maps and classloaders are in Java, access modifiers, defining a Java class, creating objects, runtime and compile time polymorphism, abstraction, interfaces, inheritance, method overloading and overriding, multiple inheritance, encapsulation, servlet lifecycles, session management in servlets, JDBC drivers and JDBC API components.
Top 20 c# interview Question and answersw3asp dotnet
This presentation contains interview question and answers . www.w3asp.net provide you the information, knowledge, job, practices and tranings regarding asp.net.
This document provides a summary of questions for a C# interview. It includes general C# questions, class questions, method and property questions, events and delegates questions, XML documentation questions, debugging and testing questions, ADO.NET and database questions, and assembly questions. The author gathered these questions from various sources and their own experience, and is seeking feedback to improve or suggest new questions.
C++ is an object-oriented programming language that is an incremented version of C with classes added. Some key differences between C and C++ are that C++ uses object-oriented programming with classes that can contain both data and functions, while C focuses more on procedures/functions and allows any function to access data. The document then discusses the basic concepts of object-oriented programming in C++ including classes, objects, polymorphism, inheritance, encapsulation, and data abstraction. It provides examples of classes, objects, reference variables, default arguments, and dynamic memory allocation in C++.
The document contains interview questions and answers related to C# programming concepts like classes, inheritance, polymorphism, interfaces, structs, arrays, collections, exceptions, and more. Some key points:
- C# does not support multiple inheritance but interfaces can be used instead. Private variables are inherited but not accessible.
- The top .NET class is System.Object. String is immutable while StringBuilder allows mutable operations. Arrays store single data types and Clone vs CopyTo were explained.
- Abstract classes define methods that must be overridden, while interfaces only contain method signatures that must be implemented. Structs are value types stored on the stack.
- Virtual methods can be overridden, while override changes
This document provides an overview of Unit 1 and Unit 2 of the B.Tech II Yr II Semester course. Unit 1 covers object-oriented programming concepts like classes, inheritance, polymorphism over 5 lectures. The slides cover topics such as the need for OOP, classes and instances, method binding and exceptions. Unit 2 covers Java fundamentals like data types, variables, control statements and classes over 7 lectures across 85 slides, including the history of Java and its evolution from C and C++.
The document provides an introduction to object-oriented programming concepts and Java. It discusses key OOP concepts like objects, classes, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. It also explains the basics of Java, including its history, features like being platform independent and secure, and the structure of a Java program with main components like packages, import statements, and class definitions.
This document provides an introduction to the Java programming language. It discusses Java's evolution and history from 1991 to present. It also covers Java fundamentals including data types, operators, decision making and looping constructs, classes and objects, arrays and strings. The document is intended as an overview of the major topics and features in Java.
This document provides a syllabus for a Java Programming course. The course consists of 7 topics that will be covered through lectures and practical sessions over several weeks. Students will have one exam worth 100 marks and a practical exam worth 50 marks. They will also complete term work assignments worth 25 marks. The topics covered include Java fundamentals, classes, exception handling, IO packages, multi-threading, GUI, and database connectivity. Students will submit programming assignments related to these topics as part of their term work. References for the course are also provided.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in Java, including:
- Java uses keywords and grammar rules. Keywords cannot name variables.
- Java code is compiled into bytecode that can run on any device with a Java Virtual Machine.
- There are two types of data types in Java: primitive types and abstract types. The eight primitive types are used for variables and literals.
- Variables must be declared with a name and data type. Names follow specific rules.
- Classes contain methods that define behavior. The main() method is required to run a program.
The document provides definitions and explanations of various C# concepts including polymorphism, abstract methods, virtual methods, objects, classes, static methods, inheritance, virtual keyword, abstract classes, sealed modifiers, interfaces, pure virtual functions, access modifiers, reference types, overloading, overriding, encapsulation, arrays, array lists, hash tables, queues, stacks, early binding, late binding, sorted lists, and delegates. Key points covered include the differences between abstract and virtual methods, what defines a class versus an object, when to use static versus non-static methods, inheritance implementation in C#, and the purpose of interfaces.
This document provides an overview of object-oriented programming concepts in Java including inheritance, polymorphism, abstraction, and encapsulation. It also discusses control structures like if/else statements and switches as well as repetition structures like while, do-while, and for loops. Arithmetic operations in Java like addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division are also mentioned.
The document discusses key concepts in Object Oriented Programming including objects, classes, inheritance, polymorphism, abstraction, and encapsulation. It defines each concept and provides examples. Objects have state, behavior, and identity. A class is a template for creating objects that share common properties. Inheritance allows an object to acquire properties of a parent object. Polymorphism allows one task to be performed in different ways. Abstraction hides internal details and shows functionality. Encapsulation binds code and data into a single unit.
This document provides an introduction to object-oriented programming concepts. It defines object-oriented programming as a way to conceptualize a program as interacting objects. Key concepts discussed include:
- Classes define templates for objects and their properties and behaviors.
- Objects are instantiated from classes and represent specific instances.
- Inheritance allows new classes to inherit properties from parent classes.
- Encapsulation groups related properties and methods together within objects.
- Polymorphism allows methods to perform different actions depending on an object's properties.
In procedural programs, logic follows procedures and instructions execute sequentially, while in object-oriented programs (OOP), the unit is the object which combines data and code. OOP programs encapsulate data within objects and assure security, while procedural programs expose data. Encapsulation binds code and data, inheritance allows acquiring properties of another object, and polymorphism allows a general interface for class actions. Initialization can only occur once while assignment can occur multiple times. OOP organizes programs around objects and well-defined interfaces to data, with objects controlling access to code.
Visual Basic is an object-oriented programming language that supports object-oriented programming features like abstraction, encapsulation, polymorphism, and inheritance. It emphasizes objects and classes, with a program divided into objects that communicate through functions. Objects are instances of classes that contain data members and methods. Classes group similar objects and methods become class functions.
The document discusses Object Database standards and languages. It covers:
1. The ODMG (Object Data Management Group) proposed standards for object database management systems (ODBMS) including an object model, object definition language (ODL), object query language (OQL), and bindings to object-oriented programming languages.
2. The ODMG object model specifies object constructs like objects, literals, types and their specifications/implementations. It also covers objects, literals, and collection objects.
3. The ODL is used to define object schemas and types. The OQL is used to query and manipulate object databases.
The document discusses the final keyword in Java and provides examples of using final with variables, methods, and classes. It then summarizes abstract classes and interfaces in Java, including how to declare abstract classes and methods and how interfaces are used to achieve abstraction and multiple inheritance. The document also covers packages, access modifiers, encapsulation, and arrays in Java.
Object oriented programming is a modular approach to programming that treats data and functions that operate on that data as objects. The basic elements of OOP are objects, classes, and inheritance. Objects contain both data and functions that operate on that data. Classes are templates that define common properties and relationships between objects. Inheritance allows new classes to acquire properties of existing classes. OOP provides advantages like modularity, code reuse, and data abstraction.
The document discusses object-oriented programming concepts like inheritance, subclasses, and polymorphism. It provides examples of different forms of inheritance including:
1. Inheritance for specialization where a child class is a specialized form of the parent class and the principle of substitutability holds.
2. Inheritance for specification where a parent class specifies behavior but doesn't implement it, and child classes implement the behavior, like with interfaces and abstract classes.
3. Inheritance for construction where a child class inherits functionality from a parent but may change method names/parameters, primarily for code reuse rather than creating a subtype relationship.
A database is a collection of logically related data organized for convenient access and manipulation. A DBMS is a collection of programs that enables users to create and maintain a database, perform queries, and generate reports from the database. The database and DBMS together form a database system. Some key advantages of a DBMS include reducing data redundancy and inconsistency, enforcing data integrity, providing security, and facilitating data sharing among multiple users.
The document summarizes key concepts in database management systems (DBMS). It defines a database as a collection of logically related data for a specific purpose. A DBMS is software that allows users to define, create, and manipulate this database. Together, the database and DBMS are called a database system. The document then covers database concepts like data models, normalization, queries, and more. It provides examples to illustrate database management system concepts.
The document defines various database concepts including database, DBMS, database system, data independence, data models, relational algebra, relational calculus, normalization, and SQL. It also describes database architecture including the RDBMS kernel, subsystems, data dictionary, and how users communicate with an RDBMS using SQL. The key differences between SQL and other languages are that SQL is non-procedural and declarative, allowing users to specify what data to retrieve rather than how to retrieve it.
The document contains interview questions and answers related to C# programming concepts like classes, inheritance, polymorphism, interfaces, structs, arrays, collections, exceptions, and more. Some key points:
- C# does not support multiple inheritance but interfaces can be used instead. Private variables are inherited but not accessible.
- The top .NET class is System.Object. String is immutable while StringBuilder allows mutable operations. Arrays store single data types and Clone vs CopyTo were explained.
- Abstract classes define methods that must be overridden, while interfaces only contain method signatures that must be implemented. Structs are value types stored on the stack.
- Virtual methods can be overridden, while override changes
This document provides an overview of Unit 1 and Unit 2 of the B.Tech II Yr II Semester course. Unit 1 covers object-oriented programming concepts like classes, inheritance, polymorphism over 5 lectures. The slides cover topics such as the need for OOP, classes and instances, method binding and exceptions. Unit 2 covers Java fundamentals like data types, variables, control statements and classes over 7 lectures across 85 slides, including the history of Java and its evolution from C and C++.
The document provides an introduction to object-oriented programming concepts and Java. It discusses key OOP concepts like objects, classes, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. It also explains the basics of Java, including its history, features like being platform independent and secure, and the structure of a Java program with main components like packages, import statements, and class definitions.
This document provides an introduction to the Java programming language. It discusses Java's evolution and history from 1991 to present. It also covers Java fundamentals including data types, operators, decision making and looping constructs, classes and objects, arrays and strings. The document is intended as an overview of the major topics and features in Java.
This document provides a syllabus for a Java Programming course. The course consists of 7 topics that will be covered through lectures and practical sessions over several weeks. Students will have one exam worth 100 marks and a practical exam worth 50 marks. They will also complete term work assignments worth 25 marks. The topics covered include Java fundamentals, classes, exception handling, IO packages, multi-threading, GUI, and database connectivity. Students will submit programming assignments related to these topics as part of their term work. References for the course are also provided.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in Java, including:
- Java uses keywords and grammar rules. Keywords cannot name variables.
- Java code is compiled into bytecode that can run on any device with a Java Virtual Machine.
- There are two types of data types in Java: primitive types and abstract types. The eight primitive types are used for variables and literals.
- Variables must be declared with a name and data type. Names follow specific rules.
- Classes contain methods that define behavior. The main() method is required to run a program.
The document provides definitions and explanations of various C# concepts including polymorphism, abstract methods, virtual methods, objects, classes, static methods, inheritance, virtual keyword, abstract classes, sealed modifiers, interfaces, pure virtual functions, access modifiers, reference types, overloading, overriding, encapsulation, arrays, array lists, hash tables, queues, stacks, early binding, late binding, sorted lists, and delegates. Key points covered include the differences between abstract and virtual methods, what defines a class versus an object, when to use static versus non-static methods, inheritance implementation in C#, and the purpose of interfaces.
This document provides an overview of object-oriented programming concepts in Java including inheritance, polymorphism, abstraction, and encapsulation. It also discusses control structures like if/else statements and switches as well as repetition structures like while, do-while, and for loops. Arithmetic operations in Java like addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division are also mentioned.
The document discusses key concepts in Object Oriented Programming including objects, classes, inheritance, polymorphism, abstraction, and encapsulation. It defines each concept and provides examples. Objects have state, behavior, and identity. A class is a template for creating objects that share common properties. Inheritance allows an object to acquire properties of a parent object. Polymorphism allows one task to be performed in different ways. Abstraction hides internal details and shows functionality. Encapsulation binds code and data into a single unit.
This document provides an introduction to object-oriented programming concepts. It defines object-oriented programming as a way to conceptualize a program as interacting objects. Key concepts discussed include:
- Classes define templates for objects and their properties and behaviors.
- Objects are instantiated from classes and represent specific instances.
- Inheritance allows new classes to inherit properties from parent classes.
- Encapsulation groups related properties and methods together within objects.
- Polymorphism allows methods to perform different actions depending on an object's properties.
In procedural programs, logic follows procedures and instructions execute sequentially, while in object-oriented programs (OOP), the unit is the object which combines data and code. OOP programs encapsulate data within objects and assure security, while procedural programs expose data. Encapsulation binds code and data, inheritance allows acquiring properties of another object, and polymorphism allows a general interface for class actions. Initialization can only occur once while assignment can occur multiple times. OOP organizes programs around objects and well-defined interfaces to data, with objects controlling access to code.
Visual Basic is an object-oriented programming language that supports object-oriented programming features like abstraction, encapsulation, polymorphism, and inheritance. It emphasizes objects and classes, with a program divided into objects that communicate through functions. Objects are instances of classes that contain data members and methods. Classes group similar objects and methods become class functions.
The document discusses Object Database standards and languages. It covers:
1. The ODMG (Object Data Management Group) proposed standards for object database management systems (ODBMS) including an object model, object definition language (ODL), object query language (OQL), and bindings to object-oriented programming languages.
2. The ODMG object model specifies object constructs like objects, literals, types and their specifications/implementations. It also covers objects, literals, and collection objects.
3. The ODL is used to define object schemas and types. The OQL is used to query and manipulate object databases.
The document discusses the final keyword in Java and provides examples of using final with variables, methods, and classes. It then summarizes abstract classes and interfaces in Java, including how to declare abstract classes and methods and how interfaces are used to achieve abstraction and multiple inheritance. The document also covers packages, access modifiers, encapsulation, and arrays in Java.
Object oriented programming is a modular approach to programming that treats data and functions that operate on that data as objects. The basic elements of OOP are objects, classes, and inheritance. Objects contain both data and functions that operate on that data. Classes are templates that define common properties and relationships between objects. Inheritance allows new classes to acquire properties of existing classes. OOP provides advantages like modularity, code reuse, and data abstraction.
The document discusses object-oriented programming concepts like inheritance, subclasses, and polymorphism. It provides examples of different forms of inheritance including:
1. Inheritance for specialization where a child class is a specialized form of the parent class and the principle of substitutability holds.
2. Inheritance for specification where a parent class specifies behavior but doesn't implement it, and child classes implement the behavior, like with interfaces and abstract classes.
3. Inheritance for construction where a child class inherits functionality from a parent but may change method names/parameters, primarily for code reuse rather than creating a subtype relationship.
A database is a collection of logically related data organized for convenient access and manipulation. A DBMS is a collection of programs that enables users to create and maintain a database, perform queries, and generate reports from the database. The database and DBMS together form a database system. Some key advantages of a DBMS include reducing data redundancy and inconsistency, enforcing data integrity, providing security, and facilitating data sharing among multiple users.
The document summarizes key concepts in database management systems (DBMS). It defines a database as a collection of logically related data for a specific purpose. A DBMS is software that allows users to define, create, and manipulate this database. Together, the database and DBMS are called a database system. The document then covers database concepts like data models, normalization, queries, and more. It provides examples to illustrate database management system concepts.
The document defines various database concepts including database, DBMS, database system, data independence, data models, relational algebra, relational calculus, normalization, and SQL. It also describes database architecture including the RDBMS kernel, subsystems, data dictionary, and how users communicate with an RDBMS using SQL. The key differences between SQL and other languages are that SQL is non-procedural and declarative, allowing users to specify what data to retrieve rather than how to retrieve it.
A database management system (DBMS) is system software for creating and managing databases. The DBMS provides users and programmers with a systematic way to create, retrieve, update and manage data.
A DBMS makes it possible for end users to create, read, update and delete data in a database. The DBMS essentially serves as an interface between the database and end users or application programs, ensuring that data is consistently organized and remains easily accessible.Read more.........
The document provides information on databases, DBMS, database systems, advantages of DBMS over file processing systems, levels of data abstraction, integrity rules, extension and intension, System R, data independence, views, data models including E-R and object-oriented models, entities, entity sets, attributes, relations, relationships, keys, normalization, relational algebra, relational calculus, and other database concepts.
The document discusses various concepts related to databases and DBMS. It defines what a database and DBMS are, describes the advantages and disadvantages of using a DBMS compared to file processing systems, and covers topics like data models, relational algebra, normalization, and transaction management. It provides explanations of key terms through a question and answer format.
A database is a collection of logically related data organized for convenient access, usually by programs for specific purposes. A DBMS is software that allows users to define, construct and manipulate databases for various applications. The database and DBMS together form a database system. A DBMS provides advantages like reducing data redundancy and inconsistency, restricting unauthorized access, and enforcing data integrity and security.
DBMS Campus crack Question Prepared by Randhir KumarRandhir Chouhan
This document contains a summary of database concepts prepared by Mr. Randhir Kumar. It defines key terms like database, DBMS, database system, data models, ER model, relational model, and normal forms like 1NF, 2NF and 3NF. It also covers transaction management concepts like atomicity and durability, and database architecture topics such as query optimization, indexing, and the system catalog.
This document defines key concepts in database management systems including:
1. A DBMS is a collection of interrelated data and programs to access the data. It is used in applications like banking, airlines, universities, etc.
2. Data is abstracted and stored at different levels (physical, logical, view). Schemas define the overall database design and instances represent the data stored at a moment in time.
3. Relationships associate entities and are modeled in ER diagrams using lines and diamonds. Keys uniquely identify entities and relationships.
This document provides an overview of database management systems and conceptual modeling. It defines key terms like DBMS, database schema, instance, physical schema, logical schema, and data model. It also describes data abstraction levels, the entity-relationship model, relational model components like tuples and relations, and relational algebra and calculus operations. The document consists of questions and answers on database concepts and topics like data modeling, the storage manager, and the entity-relationship diagram.
17032658 database-management-systems-tutorial-090917034406-phpapp02Samina Sam Sam
This document provides an overview of key concepts related to database management systems and the relational model. It defines what a DBMS is and lists common applications. File processing systems are described as having disadvantages like data redundancy and inconsistency that a DBMS addresses through features like controlling redundancy and enforcing integrity constraints. Concepts covered include the three levels of data abstraction in a DBMS, the difference between schemas and instances, and data models. The document also provides definitions and explanations of core relational model concepts such as relations, tuples, attributes, domains, keys, and relational algebra operations.
This document provides information about data structures and databases. It discusses key concepts like data structures, data abstraction levels in databases, relational and network data models, integrity rules, advantages of DBMS over file processing systems, and more. Examples of data structures include trees, graphs, and arrays. Database topics covered include the components of a database system, data independence, views, and entity-relationship modeling.
The document discusses Codd's rules for relational database management systems (RDBMS). It explains the 13 rules, which include that data should only be represented as values in tables, null values must be supported, and the database description must be queryable using the same relational language as the data. It also defines what constitutes an RDBMS, describes database concepts like normalization, and provides examples of relationships and integrity rules.
The document discusses DBMS viva questions and answers. It contains 61 questions and their explanations related to key concepts in database management systems including databases, DBMS, data models, data storage, transaction management, and more. The questions cover topics like data independence, normalization, indexing, and recovery mechanisms in DBMS.
The document provides definitions and explanations of key concepts in database management systems. It discusses:
- The purpose of a DBMS is to solve problems with file processing systems like data redundancy, inconsistency, difficult data access and isolation, and integrity and concurrency issues.
- Data abstraction and levels of abstraction hide complexity from users through physical, logical, and view levels.
- A DBMS provides an environment for convenient and efficient data retrieval and storage.
- Data independence allows changes to schema definitions without affecting other levels.
Islamic University Previous Year Question Solution 2019 (ADBMS)Rakibul Hasan Pranto
Database administrators (DBAs) manage databases and are responsible for tasks like creating the database schema, defining storage structures and access methods, modifying the schema or physical organization when needed, granting authorization for data access, and specifying integrity constraints. Other database roles include application programmers, sophisticated users, specialized users, standalone users, native users, and system analysts who are responsible for database design, structure, and properties.
The document discusses database concepts and SQL. It defines a database as an organized collection of related information. A database management system (DBMS) is software that allows users to create, access, manage and control databases. The major components of a DBMS are data, hardware, software and users. Different database models are discussed including hierarchical, network and relational models. Key aspects of the relational model like tables, rows, columns, primary keys and foreign keys are explained.
The document provides an overview of relational database management systems and normalization. Some key points include:
- RDBMSs use SQL to define, manipulate, and control access to data in databases. The data is stored in tables and related to each other through common values.
- Normalization is the process of structuring data to minimize redundancy and dependency. It involves organizing data into tables and establishing relationships between those tables via their primary and foreign keys.
- Normal forms like 1NF, 2NF, and 3NF define rules for decomposing tables to eliminate anomalies and inappropriate repetition of data. The third normal form is sufficient for most business database designs.
- An example demonstrates normalizing a timesheet
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 8 -- int...Kuntal Bhowmick
This document contains a bank of multiple choice questions about object oriented programming interfaces. It includes 21 questions about interfaces, each with 4 possible answers, followed by an explanation of the correct answer. The questions cover topics like how interfaces define methods without implementation, how classes implement interfaces, and how interfaces can extend other interfaces.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 7 -- abs...Kuntal Bhowmick
The document contains a collection of multiple choice questions and answers about abstract classes in object-oriented programming. It includes 14 questions that test understanding of key concepts of abstract classes such as: when the abstract keyword is used, defining abstract methods, preventing instantiation of abstract classes, requiring subclasses to implement abstract methods, and preventing inheritance of classes. Each question is presented on an even page with its answer on the adjacent odd page.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 6 -- inh...Kuntal Bhowmick
This document contains a 20 question multiple choice quiz about object oriented programming concepts related to inheritance. Each question is presented on an even page with the corresponding answer and explanation on the adjacent odd page. The quiz covers topics like superclass vs subclass, method overriding vs hiding, inheritance terminology in Java, and advantages/disadvantages of inheritance. The document instructs readers to first attempt each question before looking at the solution, and suggests viewing it in single page mode for clarity.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 5 -- mem...Kuntal Bhowmick
This document contains 18 multiple choice questions about memory management in object-oriented programming. It provides the questions, possible answers, and explanations for the answers. The questions cover topics like garbage collection, heap fragmentation, advantages and disadvantages of garbage collection, the finalize() method, the this keyword, call by value vs call by reference, final variables and methods, static and nested classes.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 4 -- loopsKuntal Bhowmick
1. The document contains 10 multiple choice questions about loops in object oriented programming.
2. Each question is presented on an even page with the solution provided on the adjacent odd page.
3. The questions cover topics like the while loop condition, do-while loop execution, for loop syntax, and the use of break and continue statements.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 3 -- cla...Kuntal Bhowmick
This document contains a 17-page MCQ quiz on object-oriented programming concepts like classes, objects, and conditional statements. It includes 18 multiple choice questions about topics such as the difference between classes and objects, access specifiers, method overloading, constructors, and if statements. Each question is presented on an even page with the corresponding explanation and answer on the adjacent odd page. The document instructs readers to first attempt each question themselves before checking the solution.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 2 -- bas...Kuntal Bhowmick
This document contains a 20-question multiple choice quiz on basic object-oriented programming concepts in Java. Each question is presented on an even page with possible answer options, while the corresponding solution and explanation is given on the adjacent odd page. The quiz covers fundamental topics like data types, access specifiers, inheritance, polymorphism, and more.
Multiple Choice Questions on JAVA (object oriented programming) bank 1 -- int...Kuntal Bhowmick
This document contains 20 multiple choice questions about object-oriented programming concepts. It provides the questions on adjacent even pages and the answers on adjacent odd pages. Some key concepts covered include encapsulation, inheritance, polymorphism, abstraction, and the differences between Java and C++.
Hashing notes data structures (HASHING AND HASH FUNCTIONS)Kuntal Bhowmick
A Hash table is a data structure used for storing and retrieving data very quickly. Insertion of data in the hash table is based on the key value. Hence every entry in the hash table is associated with some key.
HASHING AND HASH FUNCTIONS, HASH TABLE REPRESENTATION, HASH FUNCTION, TYPES OF HASH FUNCTIONS, COLLISION, COLLISION RESOLUTION, CHAINING, OPEN ADDRESSING – LINEAR PROBING, QUADRATIC PROBING, DOUBLE HASHING
introduction to E-commerce, Electronic commerce, EDI, CS802E,
e-commerce ,edi ,electronic data interchange ,traditional commerce ,buyer and seller ,origin of e-commerce ,business process ,impact of e-commerce ,value chain analysis ,company value chain ,case studies on e-commerce ,advantages of e-commerce ,disadvantages of e-commerce
The Bresenham's line algorithm uses integer calculations to draw lines on a raster display. It works by determining which pixel to plot next along the line based on a decision parameter. The parameter is initially calculated based on the line's slope and endpoints, and then updated as the algorithm moves from pixel to pixel. This allows the algorithm to avoid floating point arithmetic for improved efficiency.
This document provides an overview of object-oriented programming concepts in Java including encapsulation, inheritance, polymorphism, and abstraction. It also discusses key Java features like classes, interfaces, access modifiers, and differences between abstract classes and interfaces. Object-oriented principles like encapsulation, inheritance and polymorphism are explained along with examples. Common questions about Java concepts are also addressed at the end.
This document discusses various operating system concepts related to processes and threads. It defines key process terms like process state, process control block, and scheduling queues. It describes the different types of scheduling including long term, short term, and medium term scheduling. It also discusses process states like new, ready, running, waiting, and terminated. Process control blocks are described as storing information about the process state, program counter, CPU registers, scheduling, memory management, I/O status, and accounting. Scheduling queues include the job queue, ready queue, and device queues.
This document provides an overview of networking concepts including definitions of key terms like network, link, node, gateway, transmission media, protocols, error detection, and reliable data transmission protocols. It discusses the layers of the OSI model and responsibilities of each layer. Finally, it covers data link layer protocols, framing, flow control, error control techniques like ARQ, and reliable transmission protocols like stop-and-wait and sliding window protocols.
The document contains summaries of several C programming examples:
1. Programs to calculate the area and circumference of a circle, find simple interest, convert temperatures between Celsius and Fahrenheit, calculate subject marks and percentages, and calculate gross salary.
2. Additional programs demonstrate swapping values with and without a third variable, finding the greatest of three numbers, determining if a year is a leap year, and identifying integers as odd or even, positive or negative.
3. Further programs check if an integer is divisible by 5 and 11, compare two integers for equality, use a switch statement to print days of the week, and perform arithmetic operations using a switch case.
This document outlines 75 programming assignments covering fundamental C programming concepts like loops, arrays, pointers, strings, functions, structures, unions, and file handling. Students are instructed to only code the programs marked with asterisks in their lab assignment. The document provides the assignment questions, descriptions and page numbers. It also includes a link and QR code for online access to the file containing the full assignment details.
This document provides an introduction to programming and some key skills needed. It discusses a simplified model of programming using a calculator to perform tasks like calculating an average. It notes computers require precise instructions and details everything. The document outlines four key skills: attention to detail, thinking like a "stupid" computer, good memory, and ability to think abstractly on several levels by compartmentalizing tasks. Real programming requires care, craftsmanship and managing complexity through abstraction.
Raish Khanji GTU 8th sem Internship Report.pdfRaishKhanji
This report details the practical experiences gained during an internship at Indo German Tool
Room, Ahmedabad. The internship provided hands-on training in various manufacturing technologies, encompassing both conventional and advanced techniques. Significant emphasis was placed on machining processes, including operation and fundamental
understanding of lathe and milling machines. Furthermore, the internship incorporated
modern welding technology, notably through the application of an Augmented Reality (AR)
simulator, offering a safe and effective environment for skill development. Exposure to
industrial automation was achieved through practical exercises in Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs) using Siemens TIA software and direct operation of industrial robots
utilizing teach pendants. The principles and practical aspects of Computer Numerical Control
(CNC) technology were also explored. Complementing these manufacturing processes, the
internship included extensive application of SolidWorks software for design and modeling tasks. This comprehensive practical training has provided a foundational understanding of
key aspects of modern manufacturing and design, enhancing the technical proficiency and readiness for future engineering endeavors.
Passenger car unit (PCU) of a vehicle type depends on vehicular characteristics, stream characteristics, roadway characteristics, environmental factors, climate conditions and control conditions. Keeping in view various factors affecting PCU, a model was developed taking a volume to capacity ratio and percentage share of particular vehicle type as independent parameters. A microscopic traffic simulation model VISSIM has been used in present study for generating traffic flow data which some time very difficult to obtain from field survey. A comparison study was carried out with the purpose of verifying when the adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system (ANFIS), artificial neural network (ANN) and multiple linear regression (MLR) models are appropriate for prediction of PCUs of different vehicle types. From the results observed that ANFIS model estimates were closer to the corresponding simulated PCU values compared to MLR and ANN models. It is concluded that the ANFIS model showed greater potential in predicting PCUs from v/c ratio and proportional share for all type of vehicles whereas MLR and ANN models did not perform well.
Concept of Problem Solving, Introduction to Algorithms, Characteristics of Algorithms, Introduction to Data Structure, Data Structure Classification (Linear and Non-linear, Static and Dynamic, Persistent and Ephemeral data structures), Time complexity and Space complexity, Asymptotic Notation - The Big-O, Omega and Theta notation, Algorithmic upper bounds, lower bounds, Best, Worst and Average case analysis of an Algorithm, Abstract Data Types (ADT)
π0.5: a Vision-Language-Action Model with Open-World GeneralizationNABLAS株式会社
今回の資料「Transfusion / π0 / π0.5」は、画像・言語・アクションを統合するロボット基盤モデルについて紹介しています。
拡散×自己回帰を融合したTransformerをベースに、π0.5ではオープンワールドでの推論・計画も可能に。
This presentation introduces robot foundation models that integrate vision, language, and action.
Built on a Transformer combining diffusion and autoregression, π0.5 enables reasoning and planning in open-world settings.
Fluid mechanics is the branch of physics concerned with the mechanics of fluids (liquids, gases, and plasmas) and the forces on them. Originally applied to water (hydromechanics), it found applications in a wide range of disciplines, including mechanical, aerospace, civil, chemical, and biomedical engineering, as well as geophysics, oceanography, meteorology, astrophysics, and biology.
It can be divided into fluid statics, the study of various fluids at rest, and fluid dynamics.
Fluid statics, also known as hydrostatics, is the study of fluids at rest, specifically when there's no relative motion between fluid particles. It focuses on the conditions under which fluids are in stable equilibrium and doesn't involve fluid motion.
Fluid kinematics is the branch of fluid mechanics that focuses on describing and analyzing the motion of fluids, such as liquids and gases, without considering the forces that cause the motion. It deals with the geometrical and temporal aspects of fluid flow, including velocity and acceleration. Fluid dynamics, on the other hand, considers the forces acting on the fluid.
Fluid dynamics is the study of the effect of forces on fluid motion. It is a branch of continuum mechanics, a subject which models matter without using the information that it is made out of atoms; that is, it models matter from a macroscopic viewpoint rather than from microscopic.
Fluid mechanics, especially fluid dynamics, is an active field of research, typically mathematically complex. Many problems are partly or wholly unsolved and are best addressed by numerical methods, typically using computers. A modern discipline, called computational fluid dynamics (CFD), is devoted to this approach. Particle image velocimetry, an experimental method for visualizing and analyzing fluid flow, also takes advantage of the highly visual nature of fluid flow.
Fundamentally, every fluid mechanical system is assumed to obey the basic laws :
Conservation of mass
Conservation of energy
Conservation of momentum
The continuum assumption
For example, the assumption that mass is conserved means that for any fixed control volume (for example, a spherical volume)—enclosed by a control surface—the rate of change of the mass contained in that volume is equal to the rate at which mass is passing through the surface from outside to inside, minus the rate at which mass is passing from inside to outside. This can be expressed as an equation in integral form over the control volume.
The continuum assumption is an idealization of continuum mechanics under which fluids can be treated as continuous, even though, on a microscopic scale, they are composed of molecules. Under the continuum assumption, macroscopic (observed/measurable) properties such as density, pressure, temperature, and bulk velocity are taken to be well-defined at "infinitesimal" volume elements—small in comparison to the characteristic length scale of the system, but large in comparison to molecular length scale
☁️ GDG Cloud Munich: Build With AI Workshop - Introduction to Vertex AI! ☁️
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Dive into the world of AI with our "Introduction to Vertex AI" session, presented by Google Cloud expert Randy Gupta.
"Feed Water Heaters in Thermal Power Plants: Types, Working, and Efficiency G...Infopitaara
A feed water heater is a device used in power plants to preheat water before it enters the boiler. It plays a critical role in improving the overall efficiency of the power generation process, especially in thermal power plants.
🔧 Function of a Feed Water Heater:
It uses steam extracted from the turbine to preheat the feed water.
This reduces the fuel required to convert water into steam in the boiler.
It supports Regenerative Rankine Cycle, increasing plant efficiency.
🔍 Types of Feed Water Heaters:
Open Feed Water Heater (Direct Contact)
Steam and water come into direct contact.
Mixing occurs, and heat is transferred directly.
Common in low-pressure stages.
Closed Feed Water Heater (Surface Type)
Steam and water are separated by tubes.
Heat is transferred through tube walls.
Common in high-pressure systems.
⚙️ Advantages:
Improves thermal efficiency.
Reduces fuel consumption.
Lowers thermal stress on boiler components.
Minimizes corrosion by removing dissolved gases.
its all about Artificial Intelligence(Ai) and Machine Learning and not on advanced level you can study before the exam or can check for some information on Ai for project
We introduce the Gaussian process (GP) modeling module developed within the UQLab software framework. The novel design of the GP-module aims at providing seamless integration of GP modeling into any uncertainty quantification workflow, as well as a standalone surrogate modeling tool. We first briefly present the key mathematical tools on the basis of GP modeling (a.k.a. Kriging), as well as the associated theoretical and computational framework. We then provide an extensive overview of the available features of the software and demonstrate its flexibility and user-friendliness. Finally, we showcase the usage and the performance of the software on several applications borrowed from different fields of engineering. These include a basic surrogate of a well-known analytical benchmark function; a hierarchical Kriging example applied to wind turbine aero-servo-elastic simulations and a more complex geotechnical example that requires a non-stationary, user-defined correlation function. The GP-module, like the rest of the scientific code that is shipped with UQLab, is open source (BSD license).
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RDBMS Concepts
1. What is database?
A database is a logically coherent collection of data with some inherent meaning, representing some aspect of
real world and which is designed, built and populated with data for a specific purpose.
2. What is DBMS?
It is a collection of programs that enables user to create and maintain a database. In other words it is general-
purpose software that provides the users with the processes of defining, constructing and manipulating the
database for various applications.
3. What is a Database system?
The database and DBMS software together is called as Database system.
4. Advantages of DBMS?
Ø Redundancy is controlled.
Ø Unauthorised access is restricted.
Ø Providing multiple user interfaces.
Ø Enforcing integrity constraints.
Ø Providing backup and recovery.
5. Disadvantage in File Processing System?
Ø Data redundancy & inconsistency.
Ø Difficult in accessing data.
Ø Data isolation.
Ø Data integrity.
Ø Concurrent access is not possible.
Ø Security Problems.
6. Describe the three levels of data abstraction?
The are three levels of abstraction:
Ø Physical level: The lowest level of abstraction describes how data are stored.
Ø Logical level: The next higher level of abstraction, describes what data are stored in database and what
relationship among those data.
Ø View level: The highest level of abstraction describes only part of entire database.
7. Define the "integrity rules"
There are two Integrity rules.
Ø Entity Integrity: States that "Primary key cannot have NULL value"
Ø Referential Integrity: States that "Foreign Key can be either a NULL value or should be Primary Key value of
other relation.
8. What is extension and intension?
Extension -
It is the number of tuples present in a table at any instance. This is time dependent.
Intension -
It is a constant value that gives the name, structure of table and the constraints laid on it.
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9. What is System R? What are its two major subsystems?
System R was designed and developed over a period of 1974-79 at IBM San Jose Research Center. It is a
prototype and its purpose was to demonstrate that it is possible to build a Relational System that can be used in
a real life environment to solve real life problems, with performance at least comparable to that of existing
system.
Its two subsystems are
Ø Research Storage
Ø System Relational Data System.
10. How is the data structure of System R different from the relational structure?
Unlike Relational systems in System R
Ø Domains are not supported
Ø Enforcement of candidate key uniqueness is optional
Ø Enforcement of entity integrity is optional
Ø Referential integrity is not enforced
11. What is Data Independence?
Data independence means that "the application is independent of the storage structure and access strategy of
data". In other words, The ability to modify the schema definition in one level should not affect the schema
definition in the next higher level.
Two types of Data Independence:
Ø Physical Data Independence: Modification in physical level should not affect the logical level.
Ø Logical Data Independence: Modification in logical level should affect the view level.
NOTE: Logical Data Independence is more difficult to achieve
12. What is a view? How it is related to data independence?
A view may be thought of as a virtual table, that is, a table that does not really exist in its own right but is
instead derived from one or more underlying base table. In other words, there is no stored file that direct
represents the view instead a definition of view is stored in data dictionary.
Growth and restructuring of base tables is not reflected in views. Thus the view can insulate users from the
effects of restructuring and growth in the database. Hence accounts for logical data independence.
13. What is Data Model?
A collection of conceptual tools for describing data, data relationships data semantics and constraints.
14. What is E-R model?
This data model is based on real world that consists of basic objects called entities and of relationship among
these objects. Entities are described in a database by a set of attributes.
15. What is Object Oriented model?
This model is based on collection of objects. An object contains values stored in instance variables with in the
object. An object also contains bodies of code that operate on the object. These bodies of code are called
methods. Objects that contain same types of values and the same methods are grouped together into classes.
16. What is an Entity?
It is a 'thing' in the real world with an independent existence.
17. What is an Entity type?
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It is a collection (set) of entities that have same attributes.
18. What is an Entity set?
It is a collection of all entities of particular entity type in the database.
19. What is an Extension of entity type?
The collections of entities of a particular entity type are grouped together into an entity set.
20. What is Weak Entity set?
An entity set may not have sufficient attributes to form a primary key, and its primary key compromises of its
partial key and primary key of its parent entity, then it is said to be Weak Entity set.
21. What is an attribute?
It is a particular property, which describes the entity.
22. What is a Relation Schema and a Relation?
A relation Schema denoted by R(A1, A2, …, An) is made up of the relation name R and the list of attributes Ai
that it contains. A relation is defined as a set of tuples. Let r be the relation which contains set tuples (t1, t2, t3,
..., tn). Each tuple is an ordered list of n-values t=(v1,v2, ..., vn).
23. What is degree of a Relation?
It is the number of attribute of its relation schema.
24. What is Relationship?
It is an association among two or more entities.
25. What is Relationship set?
The collection (or set) of similar relationships.
26. What is Relationship type?
Relationship type defines a set of associations or a relationship set among a given set of entity types.
27. What is degree of Relationship type?
It is the number of entity type participating.
25. What is DDL (Data Definition Language)?
A data base schema is specifies by a set of definitions expressed by a special language called DDL.
26. What is VDL (View Definition Language)?
It specifies user views and their mappings to the conceptual schema.
27. What is SDL (Storage Definition Language)?
This language is to specify the internal schema. This language may specify the mapping between two schemas.
28. What is Data Storage - Definition Language?
The storage structures and access methods used by database system are specified by a set of definition in a
special type of DDL called data storage-definition language.
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29. What is DML (Data Manipulation Language)?
This language that enable user to access or manipulate data as organised by appropriate data model.
Ø Procedural DML or Low level: DML requires a user to specify what data are needed and how to get those
data.
Ø Non-Procedural DML or High level: DML requires a user to specify what data are needed without specifying
how to get those data.
31. What is DML Compiler?
It translates DML statements in a query language into low-level instruction that the query evaluation engine can
understand.
32. What is Query evaluation engine?
It executes low-level instruction generated by compiler.
33. What is DDL Interpreter?
It interprets DDL statements and record them in tables containing metadata.
34. What is Record-at-a-time?
The Low level or Procedural DML can specify and retrieve each record from a set of records. This retrieve of a
record is said to be Record-at-a-time.
35. What is Set-at-a-time or Set-oriented?
The High level or Non-procedural DML can specify and retrieve many records in a single DML statement. This
retrieve of a record is said to be Set-at-a-time or Set-oriented.
36. What is Relational Algebra?
It is procedural query language. It consists of a set of operations that take one or two relations as input and
produce a new relation.
37. What is Relational Calculus?
It is an applied predicate calculus specifically tailored for relational databases proposed by E.F. Codd. E.g. of
languages based on it are DSL ALPHA, QUEL.
38. How does Tuple-oriented relational calculus differ from domain-oriented relational calculus
The tuple-oriented calculus uses a tuple variables i.e., variable whose only permitted values are tuples of that
relation. E.g. QUEL
The domain-oriented calculus has domain variables i.e., variables that range over the underlying domains
instead of over relation. E.g. ILL, DEDUCE.
39. What is normalization?
It is a process of analysing the given relation schemas based on their Functional Dependencies (FDs) and
primary key to achieve the properties
Ø Minimizing redundancy
Ø Minimizing insertion, deletion and update anomalies.
40. What is Functional Dependency?
A Functional dependency is denoted by X Y between two sets of attributes X and Y that are subsets of R
specifies a constraint on the possible tuple that can form a relation state r of R. The constraint is for any two
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tuples t1 and t2 in r if t1[X] = t2[X] then they have t1[Y] = t2[Y]. This means the value of X component of a
tuple uniquely determines the value of component Y.
41. When is a functional dependency F said to be minimal?
Ø Every dependency in F has a single attribute for its right hand side.
Ø We cannot replace any dependency X A in F with a dependency Y A where Y is a proper subset of X and still
have a set of dependency that is equivalent to F.
Ø We cannot remove any dependency from F and still have set of dependency that is equivalent to F.
42. What is Multivalued dependency?
Multivalued dependency denoted by X Y specified on relation schema R, where X and Y are both subsets of R,
specifies the following constraint on any relation r of R: if two tuples t1 and t2 exist in r such that t1[X] = t2[X]
then t3 and t4 should also exist in r with the following properties
Ø t3[x] = t4[X] = t1[X] = t2[X]
Ø t3[Y] = t1[Y] and t4[Y] = t2[Y]
Ø t3[Z] = t2[Z] and t4[Z] = t1[Z]
where [Z = (R-(X U Y)) ]
43. What is Lossless join property?
It guarantees that the spurious tuple generation does not occur with respect to relation schemas after
decomposition.
44. What is 1 NF (Normal Form)?
The domain of attribute must include only atomic (simple, indivisible) values.
45. What is Fully Functional dependency?
It is based on concept of full functional dependency. A functional dependency X Y is full functional
dependency if removal of any attribute A from X means that the dependency does not hold any more.
46. What is 2NF?
A relation schema R is in 2NF if it is in 1NF and every non-prime attribute A in R is fully functionally
dependent on primary key.
47. What is 3NF?
A relation schema R is in 3NF if it is in 2NF and for every FD X A either of the following is true
Ø X is a Super-key of R.
Ø A is a prime attribute of R.
In other words, if every non prime attribute is non-transitively dependent on primary key.
48. What is BCNF (Boyce-Codd Normal Form)?
A relation schema R is in BCNF if it is in 3NF and satisfies an additional constraint that for every FD X A, X
must be a candidate key.
49. What is 4NF?
A relation schema R is said to be in 4NF if for every Multivalued dependency X Y that holds over R, one of
following is true
Ø X is subset or equal to (or) XY = R.
Ø X is a super key.
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50. What is 5NF?
A Relation schema R is said to be 5NF if for every join dependency {R1, R2, ..., Rn} that holds R, one the
following is true
Ø Ri = R for some i.
Ø The join dependency is implied by the set of FD, over R in which the left side is key of R.
51. What is Domain-Key Normal Form?
A relation is said to be in DKNF if all constraints and dependencies that should hold on the the constraint can be
enforced by simply enforcing the domain constraint and key constraint on the relation.
52. What are partial, alternate,, artificial, compound and natural key?
Partial Key:
It is a set of attributes that can uniquely identify weak entities and that are related to same owner entity. It is
sometime called as Discriminator.
Alternate Key:
All Candidate Keys excluding the Primary Key are known as Alternate Keys.
Artificial Key:
If no obvious key, either stand alone or compound is available, then the last resort is to simply create a key, by
assigning a unique number to each record or occurrence. Then this is known as developing an artificial key.
Compound Key:
If no single data element uniquely identifies occurrences within a construct, then combining multiple elements
to create a unique identifier for the construct is known as creating a compound key.
Natural Key:
When one of the data elements stored within a construct is utilized as the primary key, then it is called the
natural key.
53. What is indexing and what are the different kinds of indexing?
Indexing is a technique for determining how quickly specific data can be found.
Types:
Ø Binary search style indexing
Ø B-Tree indexing
Ø Inverted list indexing
Ø Memory resident table
Ø Table indexing
54. What is system catalog or catalog relation? How is better known as?
A RDBMS maintains a description of all the data that it contains, information about every relation and index
that it contains. This information is stored in a collection of relations maintained by the system called metadata.
It is also called data dictionary.
55. What is meant by query optimization?
The phase that identifies an efficient execution plan for evaluating a query that has the least estimated cost is
referred to as query optimization.
56. What is join dependency and inclusion dependency?
Join Dependency:
A Join dependency is generalization of Multivalued dependency.A JD {R1, R2, ..., Rn} is said to hold over a
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relation R if R1, R2, R3, ..., Rn is a lossless-join decomposition of R . There is no set of sound and complete
inference rules for JD.
Inclusion Dependency:
An Inclusion Dependency is a statement of the form that some columns of a relation are contained in other
columns. A foreign key constraint is an example of inclusion dependency.
57. What is durability in DBMS?
Once the DBMS informs the user that a transaction has successfully completed, its effects should persist even if
the system crashes before all its changes are reflected on disk. This property is called durability.
58. What do you mean by atomicity and aggregation?
Atomicity:
Either all actions are carried out or none are. Users should not have to worry about the effect of incomplete
transactions. DBMS ensures this by undoing the actions of incomplete transactions.
Aggregation:
A concept which is used to model a relationship between a collection of entities and relationships. It is used
when we need to express a relationship among relationships.
59. What is a Phantom Deadlock?
In distributed deadlock detection, the delay in propagating local information might cause the deadlock detection
algorithms to identify deadlocks that do not really exist. Such situations are called phantom deadlocks and they
lead to unnecessary aborts.
60. What is a checkpoint and When does it occur?
A Checkpoint is like a snapshot of the DBMS state. By taking checkpoints, the DBMS can reduce the amount
of work to be done during restart in the event of subsequent crashes.
61. What are the different phases of transaction?
Different phases are
Ø Analysis phase
Ø Redo Phase
Ø Undo phase
62. What do you mean by flat file database?
It is a database in which there are no programs or user access languages. It has no cross-file capabilities but is
user-friendly and provides user-interface management.
63. What is "transparent DBMS"?
It is one, which keeps its Physical Structure hidden from user.
64. Brief theory of Network, Hierarchical schemas and their properties
Network schema uses a graph data structure to organize records example for such a database management
system is CTCG while a hierarchical schema uses a tree data structure example for such a system is IMS.
65. What is a query?
A query with respect to DBMS relates to user commands that are used to interact with a data base. The query
language can be classified into data definition language and data manipulation language.
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66. What do you mean by Correlated subquery?
Subqueries, or nested queries, are used to bring back a set of rows to be used by the parent query. Depending on
how the subquery is written, it can be executed once for the parent query or it can be executed once for each
row returned by the parent query. If the subquery is executed for each row of the parent, this is called a
correlated subquery.
A correlated subquery can be easily identified if it contains any references to the parent subquery columns in its
WHERE clause. Columns from the subquery cannot be referenced anywhere else in the parent query. The
following example demonstrates a non-correlated subquery.
E.g. Select * From CUST Where '10/03/1990' IN (Select ODATE From ORDER Where CUST.CNUM =
ORDER.CNUM)
67. What are the primitive operations common to all record management systems?
Addition, deletion and modification.
68. Name the buffer in which all the commands that are typed in are stored
'Edit' Buffer
69. What are the unary operations in Relational Algebra?
PROJECTION and SELECTION.
70. Are the resulting relations of PRODUCT and JOIN operation the same?
No.
PRODUCT: Concatenation of every row in one relation with every row in another.
JOIN: Concatenation of rows from one relation and related rows from another.
71. What is RDBMS KERNEL?
Two important pieces of RDBMS architecture are the kernel, which is the software, and the data dictionary,
which consists of the system-level data structures used by the kernel to manage the database
You might think of an RDBMS as an operating system (or set of subsystems), designed specifically for
controlling data access; its primary functions are storing, retrieving, and securing data. An RDBMS maintains
its own list of authorized users and their associated privileges; manages memory caches and paging; controls
locking for concurrent resource usage; dispatches and schedules user requests; and manages space usage within
its table-space structures
.
72. Name the sub-systems of a RDBMS
I/O, Security, Language Processing, Process Control, Storage Management, Logging and Recovery,
Distribution Control, Transaction Control, Memory Management, Lock Management
73. Which part of the RDBMS takes care of the data dictionary? How
Data dictionary is a set of tables and database objects that is stored in a special area of the database and
maintained exclusively by the kernel.
74. What is the job of the information stored in data-dictionary?
The information in the data dictionary validates the existence of the objects, provides access to them, and maps
the actual physical storage location.
75. Not only RDBMS takes care of locating data it also
determines an optimal access path to store or retrieve the data
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76. How do you communicate with an RDBMS?
You communicate with an RDBMS using Structured Query Language (SQL)
77. Define SQL and state the differences between SQL and other conventional programming Languages
SQL is a nonprocedural language that is designed specifically for data access operations on normalized
relational database structures. The primary difference between SQL and other conventional programming
languages is that SQL statements specify what data operations should be performed rather than how to perform
them.
78. Name the three major set of files on disk that compose a database in Oracle
There are three major sets of files on disk that compose a database. All the files are binary. These are
Ø Database files
Ø Control files
Ø Redo logs
The most important of these are the database files where the actual data resides. The control files and the redo
logs support the functioning of the architecture itself.
All three sets of files must be present, open, and available to Oracle for any data on the database to be useable.
Without these files, you cannot access the database, and the database administrator might have to recover some
or all of the database using a backup, if there is one.
79. What is an Oracle Instance?
The Oracle system processes, also known as Oracle background processes, provide functions for the user
processes-functions that would otherwise be done by the user processes themselves
Oracle database-wide system memory is known as the SGA, the system global area or shared global area. The
data and control structures in the SGA are shareable, and all the Oracle background processes and user
processes can use them.
The combination of the SGA and the Oracle background processes is known as an Oracle instance
80. What are the four Oracle system processes that must always be up and running for the database to be
useable
The four Oracle system processes that must always be up and running for the database to be useable include
DBWR (Database Writer), LGWR (Log Writer), SMON (System Monitor), and PMON (Process Monitor).
81. What are database files, control files and log files. How many of these files should a database have at
least? Why?
Database Files
The database files hold the actual data and are typically the largest in size. Depending on their sizes, the tables
(and other objects) for all the user accounts can go in one database file-but that's not an ideal situation because it
does not make the database structure very flexible for controlling access to storage for different users, putting
the database on different disk drives, or backing up and restoring just part of the database.
You must have at least one database file but usually, more than one files are used. In terms of accessing and
using the data in the tables and other objects, the number (or location) of the files is immaterial.
The database files are fixed in size and never grow bigger than the size at which they were created
Control Files
The control files and redo logs support the rest of the architecture. Any database must have at least one control
file, although you typically have more than one to guard against loss. The control file records the name of the
database, the date and time it was created, the location of the database and redo logs, and the synchronization
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information to ensure that all three sets of files are always in step. Every time you add a new database or redo
log file to the database, the information is recorded in the control files.
Redo Logs
Any database must have at least two redo logs. These are the journals for the database; the redo logs record all
changes to the user objects or system objects. If any type of failure occurs, the changes recorded in the redo logs
can be used to bring the database to a consistent state without losing any committed transactions. In the case of
non-data loss failure, Oracle can apply the information in the redo logs automatically without intervention from
the DBA.
The redo log files are fixed in size and never grow dynamically from the size at which they were created.
82. What is ROWID?
The ROWID is a unique database-wide physical address for every row on every table. Once assigned (when the
row is first inserted into the database), it never changes until the row is deleted or the table is dropped.
The ROWID consists of the following three components, the combination of which uniquely identifies the
physical storage location of the row.
Ø Oracle database file number, which contains the block with the rows
Ø Oracle block address, which contains the row
Ø The row within the block (because each block can hold many rows)
The ROWID is used internally in indexes as a quick means of retrieving rows with a particular key value.
Application developers also use it in SQL statements as a quick way to access a row once they know the
ROWID
83. What is Oracle Block? Can two Oracle Blocks have the same address?
Oracle "formats" the database files into a number of Oracle blocks when they are first created-making it easier
for the RDBMS software to manage the files and easier to read data into the memory areas.
The block size should be a multiple of the operating system block size. Regardless of the block size, the entire
block is not available for holding data; Oracle takes up some space to manage the contents of the block. This
block header has a minimum size, but it can grow.
These Oracle blocks are the smallest unit of storage. Increasing the Oracle block size can improve performance,
but it should be done only when the database is first created.
Each Oracle block is numbered sequentially for each database file starting at 1. Two blocks can have the same
block address if they are in different database files.
84. What is database Trigger?
A database trigger is a PL/SQL block that can defined to automatically execute for insert, update, and delete
statements against a table. The trigger can e defined to execute once for the entire statement or once for every
row that is inserted, updated, or deleted. For any one table, there are twelve events for which you can define
database triggers. A database trigger can call database procedures that are also written in PL/SQL.
85. Name two utilities that Oracle provides, which are use for backup and recovery.
Along with the RDBMS software, Oracle provides two utilities that you can use to back up and restore the
database. These utilities are Export and Import.
The Export utility dumps the definitions and data for the specified part of the database to an operating system
binary file. The Import utility reads the file produced by an export, recreates the definitions of objects, and
inserts the data
If Export and Import are used as a means of backing up and recovering the database, all the changes made to the
database cannot be recovered since the export was performed. The best you can do is recover the database to the
time when the export was last performed.
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86. What are stored-procedures? And what are the advantages of using them.
Stored procedures are database objects that perform a user defined operation. A stored procedure can have a set
of compound SQL statements. A stored procedure executes the SQL commands and returns the result to the
client. Stored procedures are used to reduce network traffic.
87. How are exceptions handled in PL/SQL? Give some of the internal exceptions' name
PL/SQL exception handling is a mechanism for dealing with run-time errors encountered during procedure
execution. Use of this mechanism enables execution to continue if the error is not severe enough to cause
procedure termination.
The exception handler must be defined within a subprogram specification. Errors cause the program to raise an
exception with a transfer of control to the exception-handler block. After the exception handler executes,
control returns to the block in which the handler was defined. If there are no more executable statements in the
block, control returns to the caller.
User-Defined Exceptions
PL/SQL enables the user to define exception handlers in the declarations area of subprogram specifications.
User accomplishes this by naming an exception as in the following example:
ot_failure EXCEPTION;
In this case, the exception name is ot_failure. Code associated with this handler is written in the EXCEPTION
specification area as follows:
EXCEPTION
when OT_FAILURE then
out_status_code := g_out_status_code;
out_msg := g_out_msg;
The following is an example of a subprogram exception:
EXCEPTION
when NO_DATA_FOUND then
g_out_status_code := 'FAIL';
RAISE ot_failure;
Within this exception is the RAISE statement that transfers control back to the ot_failure exception handler.
This technique of raising the exception is used to invoke all user-defined exceptions.
System-Defined Exceptions
Exceptions internal to PL/SQL are raised automatically upon error. NO_DATA_FOUND is a system-defined
exception. Table below gives a complete list of internal exceptions.
PL/SQL internal exceptions.
Exception Name Oracle Error
CURSOR_ALREADY_OPEN ORA-06511
DUP_VAL_ON_INDEX ORA-00001
INVALID_CURSOR ORA-01001
INVALID_NUMBER ORA-01722
LOGIN_DENIED ORA-01017
NO_DATA_FOUND ORA-01403
NOT_LOGGED_ON ORA-01012
PROGRAM_ERROR ORA-06501
STORAGE_ERROR ORA-06500
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TIMEOUT_ON_RESOURCE ORA-00051
TOO_MANY_ROWS ORA-01422
TRANSACTION_BACKED_OUT ORA-00061
VALUE_ERROR ORA-06502
ZERO_DIVIDE ORA-01476
In addition to this list of exceptions, there is a catch-all exception named OTHERS that traps all errors for
which specific error handling has not been established.
88. Does PL/SQL support "overloading"? Explain
The concept of overloading in PL/SQL relates to the idea that you can define procedures and functions with the
same name. PL/SQL does not look only at the referenced name, however, to resolve a procedure or function
call. The count and data types of formal parameters are also considered.
PL/SQL also attempts to resolve any procedure or function calls in locally defined packages before looking at
globally defined packages or internal functions. To further ensure calling the proper procedure, you can use the
dot notation. Prefacing a procedure or function name with the package name fully qualifies any procedure or
function reference.
89. Tables derived from the ERD
a) Are totally unnormalised
b) Are always in 1NF
c) Can be further denormalised
d) May have multi-valued attributes
(b) Are always in 1NF
90. Spurious tuples may occur due to
i. Bad normalization
ii. Theta joins
iii. Updating tables from join
a) i & ii b) ii & iii
c) i & iii d) ii & iii
(a) i & ii because theta joins are joins made on keys that are not primary keys.
91. A B C is a set of attributes. The functional dependency is as follows
AB -> B
AC -> C
C -> B
a) is in 1NF
b) is in 2NF
c) is in 3NF
d) is in BCNF
(a) is in 1NF since (AC)+ = { A, B, C} hence AC is the primary key. Since C B is a FD given, where neither C
is a Key nor B is a prime attribute, this it is not in 3NF. Further B is not functionally dependent on key AC thus
it is not in 2NF. Thus the given FDs is in 1NF.
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92. In mapping of ERD to DFD
a) entities in ERD should correspond to an existing entity/store in DFD
b) entity in DFD is converted to attributes of an entity in ERD
c) relations in ERD has 1 to 1 correspondence to processes in DFD
d) relationships in ERD has 1 to 1 correspondence to flows in DFD
(a) entities in ERD should correspond to an existing entity/store in DFD
93. A dominant entity is the entity
a) on the N side in a 1 : N relationship
b) on the 1 side in a 1 : N relationship
c) on either side in a 1 : 1 relationship
d) nothing to do with 1 : 1 or 1 : N relationship
(b) on the 1 side in a 1 : N relationship
94. Select 'NORTH', CUSTOMER From CUST_DTLS Where REGION = 'N' Order By
CUSTOMER Union Select 'EAST', CUSTOMER From CUST_DTLS Where REGION = 'E' Order By
CUSTOMER
The above is
a) Not an error
b) Error - the string in single quotes 'NORTH' and 'SOUTH'
c) Error - the string should be in double quotes
d) Error - ORDER BY clause
(d) Error - the ORDER BY clause. Since ORDER BY clause cannot be used in UNIONS
95. What is Storage Manager?
It is a program module that provides the interface between the low-level data stored in database, application
programs and queries submitted to the system.
96. What is Buffer Manager?
It is a program module, which is responsible for fetching data from disk storage into main memory and deciding
what data to be cache in memory.
97. What is Transaction Manager?
It is a program module, which ensures that database, remains in a consistent state despite system failures and
concurrent transaction execution proceeds without conflicting.
98. What is File Manager?
It is a program module, which manages the allocation of space on disk storage and data structure used to
represent information stored on a disk.
99. What is Authorization and Integrity manager?
It is the program module, which tests for the satisfaction of integrity constraint and checks the authority of user
to access data.
100. What are stand-alone procedures?
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Procedures that are not part of a package are known as stand-alone because they independently defined. A good
example of a stand-alone procedure is one written in a SQL*Forms application. These types of procedures are
not available for reference from other Oracle tools. Another limitation of stand-alone procedures is that they are
compiled at run time, which slows execution.
101. What are cursors give different types of cursors.
PL/SQL uses cursors for all database information accesses statements. The language supports the use two types
of cursors
Ø Implicit
Ø Explicit
102. What is cold backup and hot backup (in case of Oracle)?
Ø Cold Backup:
It is copying the three sets of files (database files, redo logs, and control file) when the instance is shut down.
This is a straight file copy, usually from the disk directly to tape. You must shut down the instance to guarantee
a consistent copy.
If a cold backup is performed, the only option available in the event of data file loss is restoring all the files
from the latest backup. All work performed on the database since the last backup is lost.
Ø Hot Backup:
Some sites (such as worldwide airline reservations systems) cannot shut down the database while making a
backup copy of the files. The cold backup is not an available option.
So different means of backing up database must be used - the hot backup. Issue a SQL command to indicate to
Oracle, on a tablespace-by-tablespace basis, that the files of the tablespace are to backed up. The users can
continue to make full use of the files, including making changes to the data. Once the user has indicated that
he/she wants to back up the tablespace files, he/she can use the operating system to copy those files to the
desired backup destination.
The database must be running in ARCHIVELOG mode for the hot backup option.
If a data loss failure does occur, the lost database files can be restored using the hot backup and the online and
offline redo logs created since the backup was done. The database is restored to the most consistent state
without any loss of committed transactions.
103. What are Armstrong rules? How do we say that they are complete and/or sound
The well-known inference rules for FDs
Ø Reflexive rule :
If Y is subset or equal to X then X Y.
Ø Augmentation rule:
If X Y then XZ YZ.
Ø Transitive rule:
If {X Y, Y Z} then X Z.
Ø Decomposition rule :
If X YZ then X Y.
Ø Union or Additive rule:
If {X Y, X Z} then X YZ.
Ø Pseudo Transitive rule :
If {X Y, WY Z} then WX Z.
Of these the first three are known as Amstrong Rules. They are sound because it is enough if a set of FDs
satisfy these three. They are called complete because using these three rules we can generate the rest all
inference rules.
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104. How can you find the minimal key of relational schema?
Minimal key is one which can identify each tuple of the given relation schema uniquely. For finding the
minimal key it is required to find the closure that is the set of all attributes that are dependent on any given set
of attributes under the given set of functional dependency.
Algo. I Determining X+, closure for X, given set of FDs F
1. Set X+ = X
2. Set Old X+ = X+
3. For each FD Y Z in F and if Y belongs to X+ then add Z to X+
4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 until Old X+ = X+
Algo.II Determining minimal K for relation schema R, given set of FDs F
1. Set K to R that is make K a set of all attributes in R
2. For each attribute A in K
a. Compute (K - A)+ with respect to F
b. If (K - A)+ = R then set K = (K - A)+
105. What do you understand by dependency preservation?
Given a relation R and a set of FDs F, dependency preservation states that the closure of the union of the
projection of F on each decomposed relation Ri is equal to the closure of F. i.e.,
((PR1(F)) U … U (PRn(F)))+ = F+
if decomposition is not dependency preserving, then some dependency is lost in the decomposition.
106. What is meant by Proactive, Retroactive and Simultaneous Update.
Proactive Update:
The updates that are applied to database before it becomes effective in real world .
Retroactive Update:
The updates that are applied to database after it becomes effective in real world .
Simulatneous Update:
The updates that are applied to database at the same time when it becomes effective in real world .
107. What are the different types of JOIN operations?
Equi Join: This is the most common type of join which involves only equality comparisions. The disadvantage
in this type of join is that there