intermediate Step 12 of 15

Transactions

SQL & Databases

Transactions

Ensure data integrity with ACID transactions and isolation levels. SQL is the foundation of data management in virtually every application. Mastering transactions allows you to write efficient, correct, and maintainable database queries. Whether you are building web applications, analyzing data, or managing infrastructure, these SQL skills are essential for interacting with relational databases effectively.

Syntax and Examples

-- Transactions examples











START TRANSACTION; UPDATE accounts SET balance = balance - 100 WHERE id = 1; UPDATE accounts SET balance = balance + 100 WHERE id = 2; COMMIT;



Practical Application

Understanding transactions is critical for database performance and data integrity. In real-world applications, database queries are often the bottleneck, and knowing how to write efficient SQL can mean the difference between a page loading in 100 milliseconds versus 10 seconds. Practice these concepts with real datasets to build intuition for query design and optimization.

-- More examples for transactions


-- Use EXPLAIN to understand query execution plans
-- Index columns used in WHERE, JOIN, and ORDER BY clauses
Pro tip: Use EXPLAIN before complex queries to understand how the database executes them. Look for full table scans (type: ALL) and add indexes on columns used in WHERE and JOIN clauses.

Key Takeaways

  • Mastering transactions is essential for efficient database operations in any application.
  • Always test SELECT queries before running UPDATE or DELETE to verify affected rows.
  • Use appropriate data types and constraints to enforce data integrity at the database level.
  • Index columns that appear frequently in WHERE, JOIN, and ORDER BY clauses for better performance.
  • Practice with real datasets and use EXPLAIN to understand query execution plans.