Oracle8i SQL Reference
Release 3 (8.1.7)

Part Number A85397-01

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SQL Statements:
ALTER TABLE to constraint_clause, 7 of 14


ALTER VIEW

Purpose

Use the ALTER VIEW statement to explicitly recompile a view that is invalid. Explicit recompilation allows you to locate recompilation errors before run time. You may want to recompile a view explicitly after altering one of its base tables to ensure that the alteration does not affect the view or other objects that depend on it.

When you issue an ALTER VIEW statement, Oracle recompiles the view regardless of whether it is valid or invalid. Oracle also invalidates any local objects that depend on the view.


Notes:

  • This statement does not change the definition of an existing view. To redefine a view, you must use CREATE VIEW with OR REPLACE.

  • If you alter a view that is referenced by one or more materialized views, those materialized views are invalidated. Invalid materialized views cannot be used by query rewrite and cannot be refreshed.

 

See Also:

 

Prerequisites

The view must be in your own schema or you must have ALTER ANY TABLE system privilege.

Syntax


Keywords and Parameters

schema

Specify the schema containing the view. If you omit schema, Oracle assumes the view is in your own schema.

view

Specify the name of the view to be recompiled.

COMPILE

The COMPILE keyword is required. It directs Oracle to recompile the view.

Example

ALTER VIEW example

To recompile the view customer_view, issue the following statement:

ALTER VIEW customer_view
    COMPILE; 

If Oracle encounters no compilation errors while recompiling customer_view, customer_view becomes valid. If recompiling results in compilation errors, Oracle returns an error and customer_view remains invalid.

Oracle also invalidates all dependent objects. These objects include any procedures, functions, package bodies, and views that reference customer_view. If you subsequently reference one of these objects without first explicitly recompiling it, Oracle recompiles it implicitly at run time.


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