You can redefine a view without redefining other views that depend on it, unless the redefinition makes it impossible for Adaptive Server to translate the dependent view.
For example, the authors table and three possible views are shown below. Each succeeding view is defined using the view that preceded it: view2 is created from view1, and view3 is created from view2. In this way, view2 depends on view1 and view3 depends on both the preceding views.
Each view name is followed by the select statement used to create it.
view1:
create view view1 as select au_lname, phone from authors where postalcode like "94%"
view2:
create view view2 as select au_lname, phone from view1 where au_lname like "[M-Z]%"
view3:
create view view3 as select au_lname, phone from view2 where au_lname = "MacFeather"
The authors table on which these views are based consists of these columns: au_id, au_lname, au_fname, phone, address, city, state, and postalcode.
You can drop view2 and replace it with another view, also named view2, that contains slightly different selection criteria, such as:
create view view2 as select au_lname, phone from view3 where au_lname like "[M-P]"
view3, which depends on view2, is still valid and does not need to be redefined. When you use a query that references either view2 or view3, view resolution takes place as usual.
If you redefine view2 so that view3 cannot be derived from it, view3 becomes invalid. For example, if another new version of view2 contains a single column, au_lname, rather than the two columns that view3 expects, view3 can no longer be used because it cannot derive the phone column from the object on which it depends.
However, view3 still exists and you can use it again by dropping view2 and re-creating view2 with both the au_lname and the phone columns.
In summary, you can change the definition of an intermediate view without affecting dependent views as long as the select list of the dependent views remains valid. If this rule is violated, a query that references the invalid view produces an error message.