Deal of The Day! Hurry Up, Grab the Special Discount - Save 25% - Ends In 00:00:00 Coupon code: SAVE25
Welcome to Pass4Success

- Free Preparation Discussions

Microsoft DP-900 Exam - Topic 8 Question 55 Discussion

Actual exam question for Microsoft's DP-900 exam
Question #: 55
Topic #: 8
[All DP-900 Questions]

Which property of a transactional workload guarantees that each transaction is treated as a single unit that either succeeds completely or fails completely?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Contribute your Thoughts:

0/2000 characters
Xuan
4 months ago
Wait, are you sure it's not isolation?
upvoted 0 times
...
Angelyn
5 months ago
Yeah, atomicity is key for transactions!
upvoted 0 times
...
Shannon
5 months ago
Atomicity ensures all or nothing, right?
upvoted 0 times
...
Brittni
5 months ago
I thought it was consistency.
upvoted 0 times
...
Matthew
5 months ago
It's definitely atomicity!
upvoted 0 times
...
Dexter
5 months ago
I’m a bit confused; I thought consistency was also about ensuring transactions are valid. Is that related?
upvoted 0 times
...
Ligia
5 months ago
I practiced a similar question, and I believe atomicity was the key concept there too. It just makes sense!
upvoted 0 times
...
Ryan
5 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I remember something about isolation being important for transactions. Could it be that?
upvoted 0 times
...
Quinn
6 months ago
I think the answer might be atomicity because it relates to transactions being all or nothing, right?
upvoted 0 times
...
Jolene
6 months ago
I'm a little confused by this question. The options don't seem super clear to me. I'll have to review my notes on pruning before deciding which one to choose.
upvoted 0 times
...
Marla
6 months ago
I'm a bit confused by all the different branch site types and the hub data centers. I'll need to make sure I understand the overall network architecture before I can pinpoint the problem.
upvoted 0 times
...
Xenia
6 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit unsure about this. I'll need to review the details on the different pricing tiers and cluster configurations.
upvoted 0 times
...
Nilsa
6 months ago
Hmm, I'm not entirely sure about the difference between defect density and some of the other software quality metrics. I'll need to think this through carefully.
upvoted 0 times
...
Bjørn Suerink
3 years ago
No question about it, It has to be Atomicity see Microsoft Learn. "Atomicity - each transaction is treated as a single unit, which success completely or fails completely".
upvoted 1 times
...

Save Cancel