By now, you’ve mastered the foundations of SQL—from basic queries to table design. In this final module, we’ll dive into three advanced pillars that elevate your database skills: Views, Stored Procedures, and Functions Transactions and Concurrency Performance Tuning & Best Practices These topics empower you to encapsulate logic, ensure data integrity under load, and optimize queries for real-world workloads. Views, Stored Procedures, and Functions Encapsulating complex logic in the database makes your applications cleaner and more maintainable. Views A view is a virtual table defined by a SQL query. Use views to: Simplify joins and aggregations into a single, reusable object Enforce data security by exposing only selected columns Provide backward compatibility when underlying schemas change Example: sql CREATE VIEW sales_summary AS SELECT product_id, DATE_TRUNC('month', sale_date) AS sale_month, SUM(quantity * price) AS total_revenue FROM sales GROUP BY product_id,...
Chapter 12: Keys and Indexes Designing a robust schema goes beyond defining tables and columns. The right keys and indexes enforce data integrity, prevent anomalies, and turbocharge query performance. In this chapter, you’ll learn how to: Distinguish and implement primary keys and surrogate keys Configure foreign keys to uphold referential integrity Create the most effective indexes for your queries Balance speed gains against storage and maintenance costs By the end, you’ll know how to architect schemas that both safeguard your data and serve queries at lightning speed. 1. Primary Keys and Surrogate Keys A table’s primary key uniquely identifies each row. Choosing the right key type sets the foundation for joins, lookups, and integrity. 1.1 Natural vs. Surrogate Keys Natural Key An existing attribute or set of attributes that uniquely describes the entity (e.g., a country’s ISO code, a user’s email). • Pros: No extra column needed; human-readable. • Cons: Subject to business-...