Statement Delete Arrow

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Specify the TABLOCK hint in the DELETE statement. ... Use TRUNCATE TABLE if all rows are to be deleted from the table.
Typically no, but it depends (most often used answer for SQL Server!) SQL Server will have to lock the data involved in a transaction in some way. It has to lock the data in the table itself, and the data any affected indexes, while you perform a modification.
An INSERT statement always acquires an exclusive (X) lock on the table it modifies, and holds that lock until the transaction completes. With an exclusive (X) lock, no other transactions can modify data; read operations can take place only with the use of the NOLOCK hint or read uncommitted isolation level.
When a regular DML is executed (UPDATE/DELETE/INSERT,MERGE, and SELECT ... FOR UPDATE) oracle obtains 2 locks. ... A row share lock (RS), also called a subshare table lock (SS), indicates that the transaction holding the lock on the table has locked rows in the table and intends to update them.
Although the NOLOCK table hint, similar to all other table hints, can be used without using the WITH keyword, Microsoft announced that omitting the WITH keyword is a deprecated feature and will be removed from future Microsoft SQL Server versions.
A SELECT in SQL Server will place a shared lock on a table row - and a second SELECT would also require a shared lock, and those are compatible with one another. So no - one SELECT cannot block another SELECT .
LOCK TABLES is not transaction-safe and implicitly commits any active transaction before attempting to lock the tables. UNLOCK TABLES implicitly commits any active transaction, but only if LOCK TABLES has been used to acquire table locks.
An INSERT statement always acquires an exclusive (X) lock on the table it modifies, and holds that lock until the transaction completes. With an exclusive (X) lock, no other transactions can modify data; read operations can take place only with the use of the NOLOCK hint or read uncommitted isolation level.
A SELECT in SQL Server will place a shared lock on a table row - and a second SELECT would also require a shared lock, and those are compatible with one another. ... The SELECT will not block, and it will not read any "dirty" un-committed data - but it might skip some rows, e.g. not show all your rows in the table.
MySQL uses table locking (instead of row locking or column locking) on all table types, except InnoDB and BDB tables, to achieve a very high lock speed. ... Table locking enables many threads to read from a table at the same time, but if a thread wants to write to a table, it must first get exclusive access.
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