Views

A view is a synthetic table. You can query it as if it were a table, and in some cases, you can update it as if it were a table. However, it is not a table. It is a synthesis of the data that exists in real tables and other views.

The basis of a view is a SELECT statement. When you create a view, you define a SELECT statement that generates the contents of the view at the time you access the view. A user also queries a view with a SELECT statement. In some cases, the database server merges the select statement of the user with the one defined for the view and then actually performs the combined statements. For information about the performance of views, see your HCL OneDB™ Performance Guide.

Because you write a SELECT statement that determines the contents of the view, you can use views for any of the following purposes:
  • To restrict users to particular columns of tables

    You name only permitted columns in the select list in the view.

  • To restrict users to particular rows of tables

    You specify a WHERE clause that returns only permitted rows.

  • To constrain inserted and updated values to certain ranges

    You can use the WITH CHECK OPTION (explained on page Use the WITH CHECK OPTION keywords) to enforce constraints.

  • To provide access to derived data without storing redundant data in the database

    You write the expressions that derive the data into the select list in the view. Each time you query the view, the data is derived anew. The derived data is always up to date, yet no redundancies are introduced into the data model.

  • To hide the details of a complicated SELECT statement

    You hide complexities of a multitable join in the view so that neither users nor application programmers must repeat them.