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  2. Character large object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character_large_object

    Oracle and IBM Db2 provide a construct explicitly named CLOB, [1] [2] and the majority of other database systems support some form of the concept, often labeled as text, memo or long character fields. CLOBs usually have very high size-limits, of the order of gigabytes. The tradeoff for the capacity is usually limited access methods.

  3. Database scalability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_scalability

    Database scalability is the ability of a database to handle changing demands by adding/removing resources. Databases use a host of techniques to cope. [1] According to Marc Brooker: "a system is scalable in the range where marginal cost of additional workload is nearly constant."

  4. Comparison of relational database management systems

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_relational...

    Informix v12.10 and later versions support using sharding techniques to distribute a table across multiple server instances. A distributed Informix database has no upper limit on table or database size. Note (13): Informix DECIMAL type supports up to 32 decimal digits of precision with a range of 10 −130 to 10 125. Fixed and variable ...

  5. Very large database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very_large_database

    Should an increase in database size cause the number of accessors of the database to increase then more server and network resources may be consumed, and the risk of contention will increase. Some solutions to regaining performance include partitioning, clustering, possibly with sharding, or use of a database machine. [23]: 390 [24]

  6. Block Range Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_Range_Index

    The same may not be true of B-tree: B-tree requires a tree node for every approximately N rows in the table, where N is the capacity of a single node, thus the index size is large. As BRIN only requires a tuple for each block (of many rows), the index becomes sufficiently small to make the difference between disk and memory.

  7. Data redundancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_redundancy

    In database systems [ edit ] While different in nature, data redundancy also occurs in database systems that have values repeated unnecessarily in one or more records or fields , within a table , or where the field is replicated/repeated in two or more tables.

  8. Hierarchical and recursive queries in SQL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_and_recursive...

    A common table expression, or CTE, (in SQL) is a temporary named result set, derived from a simple query and defined within the execution scope of a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement. CTEs can be thought of as alternatives to derived tables ( subquery ), views , and inline user-defined functions.

  9. SQL syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_syntax

    Each column in an SQL table declares the type(s) that column may contain. ANSI SQL includes the following data types. [14] Character strings and national character strings. CHARACTER(n) (or CHAR(n)): fixed-width n-character string, padded with spaces as needed; CHARACTER VARYING(n) (or VARCHAR(n)): variable-width string with a maximum size of n ...