Snowflake DSA-C02 SnowPro Advanced: Data Scientist Certification Exam Online Training
Snowflake DSA-C02 Online Training
The questions for DSA-C02 were last updated at Jan 03,2025.
- Exam Code: DSA-C02
- Exam Name: SnowPro Advanced: Data Scientist Certification Exam
- Certification Provider: Snowflake
- Latest update: Jan 03,2025
Secure Data Sharing do not let you share which of the following selected objects in a database in your account with other Snowflake accounts?
- A . Sequences
- B . Tables
- C . External tables
- D . Secure UDFs
Which one is incorrect understanding about Providers of Direct share?
- A . A data provider is any Snowflake account that creates shares and makes them available to other Snowflake accounts to consume.
- B . As a data provider, you share a database with one or more Snowflake accounts.
- C . You can create as many shares as you want, and add as many accounts to a share as you want.
- D . If you want to provide a share to many accounts, you can do the same via Direct Share.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.
As Data Scientist looking out to use Reader account, Which ones are the correct considerations about Reader Accounts for Third-Party Access?
- A . Reader accounts (formerly known as “read-only accounts”) provide a quick, easy, and cost-effective way to share data without requiring the consumer to become a Snowflake customer.
- B . Each reader account belongs to the provider account that created it.
- C . Users in a reader account can query data that has been shared with the reader account, but cannot perform any of the DML tasks that are allowed in a full account, such as data loading, insert, update, and similar data manipulation operations.
- D . Data sharing is only possible between Snowflake accounts.