Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10592-02 |
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Oracle Database recognizes objects that are associated with a particular schema and objects that are not associated with any particular schema, as described in the sections that follow.
A schema is a collection of logical structures of data, or schema objects. A schema is owned by a database user and has the same name as that user. Each user owns a single schema. Schema objects can be created and manipulated with SQL and include the following types of objects:
Other types of objects are also stored in the database and can be created and manipulated with SQL but are not contained in a schema:
In this reference, each type of object is described in Chapter 10 through Chapter 19, in the section devoted to the statement that creates the database object. These statements begin with the keyword CREATE
. For example, for the definition of a cluster, see CREATE CLUSTER.
See Also:
Oracle Database Concepts for an overview of database objectsYou must provide names for most types of database objects when you create them. These names must follow the rules listed in the sections that follow.