2023 Realistic 1z0-1086-22 Dumps Latest Oracle Practice Tests Dumps [Q33-Q57]

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2023 Realistic 1z0-1086-22 Dumps Latest Oracle Practice Tests Dumps

1z0-1086-22 Dumps PDF - 1z0-1086-22 Real Exam Questions Answers


The Oracle 1z0-1086-22 exam is a valuable credential for professionals who are responsible for implementing and configuring Oracle Enterprise Data Management Cloud solutions. The exam covers a range of topics, including data modeling, data quality management, data integration, and data governance. Professionals who pass the exam will have demonstrated their ability to configure and manage Oracle Enterprise Data Management Cloud solutions to meet the unique needs of their organization.

 

NEW QUESTION # 33
You want to map two general ledger systems, GL1 and GL2, to a single EPM Planning application. It is time to synchronize changes by exporting the plan account mappings. Which statement about mapping keys is true?

  • A. You need only one mapping key and location to export the plan account mappings.
  • B. You need two mapping keys, one for GLl-to-Planning and one for GL2-to-Planning. When you export a mapping, you select the location with its associated mapping key.
  • C. You create one location per mapping key, where a mapping key is a unique source-target combination.
  • D. You create shadow mapping keys in the target application to represent the values coming from GL1 and GL2, respectively.

Answer: B

Explanation:
Explanation
When you want to map two general ledger systems, GL1 and GL2, to a single EPM Planning application, and it is time to synchronize changes by exporting the plan account mappings, the following statement about mapping keys is true: you need two mapping keys, one for GL1-to-Planning and one for GL2-to-Planning.
When you export a mapping, you select the location with its associated mapping key. Mapping keys are used to specify the source node types mapped to target node types and to define a location name to export the mapping data. You need to define one mapping key for each source node type mapped to a target node type.
For example, if you map two source applications to one target application, you need to define two mappingkeys defining the mapping relationship from each source node type to the target node type. Each mapping key is identified by a unique location name that you enter. The location name is used to export the mapping data and by the consuming or external application to import the mapping data. You do not need only one mapping key and location to export the plan account mappings, because this would not specify the correct source-to-target relationships. You do not need to create shadow mapping keys in the target application or one location per mapping key, because these are not supported by Oracle Enterprise Data Management Cloud.
References: Defining Mapping Keys - Oracle Help Center1; Exporting Mapping Data - Oracle Help Center2


NEW QUESTION # 34
Which two methods are valid ways to create request items?

  • A. Manually in a view
  • B. By loading a text file
  • C. By loading an Excel spreadsheet
  • D. By running a batch script with data changes

Answer: A,C

Explanation:
You can create request items manually in a view or by loading an Excel spreadsheet." You cannot create request items by loading a text file or by running a batch script with data changes.


NEW QUESTION # 35
You have entity information in your default view for your planning application, but you also want that entity information to be accessible in another view.
Which method can you use to accomplish this?

  • A. Copy the default view, create a request, and run a validation.
  • B. Identify the view used by the entity dimension, create a different view, and then point to the default view.
  • C. Identify the node set used by the entity dimension, create a viewpoint in a different view, and then point to that same node set.
  • D. Identify the viewpoint used by the entity dimension, create a viewpoint in a different view, and then point to the original viewpoint.

Answer: C

Explanation:
Explanation
If you have entity information in your default view for your planning application, but you also want that entity information to be accessible in another view, you can use the following method to accomplish this: identify the node set used by the entity dimension, create a viewpoint in a different view, and then point to that same node set. This way, you can reuse the same node set for different viewpoints in different views. You cannot use the other methods, because they are not supported by Oracle Enterprise Data Management Cloud. You cannot point to a view from another view, because views are collections of viewpoints and do not have a direct relationship with each other. You cannot copy a view and create a request or run a validation, because these actions are not related to creating views. You cannot point to a viewpoint from another viewpoint, because viewpoints are related to node sets and hierarchy sets rather than other viewpoints. References: Working with Views - Oracle Help Center1; Working with Viewpoints - Oracle Help Center


NEW QUESTION # 36
Which three tasks can be performed by a user with the Data Manager permission on an application?

  • A. Import, export, and update data for all dimensions in the application.
  • B. Assign permissions for the application data.
  • C. Create and submit requests for dimensions in the application.
  • D. Manage viewpoints and viewpoint subscriptions for all dimensions in the application.
  • E. Manage the application's node sets, hierarchy sets, and node types.

Answer: A,C,D

Explanation:
The Data Manager permission is the second highest level of permission that can be assigned to an application. Users with the Data Manager permission can perform various tasks such as: import, export, and update data for all dimensions in the application, create and submit requests for dimensions in the application, manage viewpoints and viewpoint subscriptions for all dimensions in the application, run business rules on dimensions in the application, copy data across dimensions in the application, etc. Users with the Data Manager permission cannot manage the application's node sets, hierarchy sets, and node types, because these are data objects that require Owner permission to manage. Users with the Data Manager permission cannot assign permissions for the application data, because this requires Owner permission as well. Reference: Working with Permissions - Oracle Help Center1; Working with Requests - Oracle Help Center3


NEW QUESTION # 37
Consider a hierarchy: A parent node, "Core Products", has a child node "100", which has children "101" and "102". In the same hierarchy, you insert "100" under another parent, "New Products".
What happens?

  • A. Node "100" is inserted as a unique node under "New Products", with a qualifier to indicate that it's a separate node from the original.
  • B. Only node "100" is inserted as a shared node under "New Products".
  • C. Node "100" and its children are inserted as shared nodes under "New Products".
  • D. Node "100" cannot be inserted under another parent in the same hierarchy.

Answer: C

Explanation:
According to the Oracle Help Center1, shared nodes are nodes that exist under different parents within a hierarchy set or viewpoint. When you insert a node that has children under another parent in the same hierarchy, the node and its children are inserted as shared nodes.


NEW QUESTION # 38
You need to map accounts from a GL application to a Planning application. You have already registered the source and target applications, and imported the source and target Account dimensions. In the Planning Account dimension, you create a map binding called Account Mapping.
Which three objects are created in the Planning application?

  • A. A node type converter with the Account (GL) node type as source and Account Mapping (Planning) node type as target
  • B. Account Mapping viewpoint in the default Planning application view
  • C. Account Mapping node set
  • D. Account Mapping hierarchy set
  • E. Account Mapping dimension

Answer: A,C,D

Explanation:
When you create a map binding in a dimension, you are creating a mapping relationship between a source node type and a target node type within that dimension. This enables you to transform properties or derive values from source nodes to target nodes when sharing data across applications. When you create a map binding called Account Mapping in the Planning Account dimension, three objects are created in the Planning application: an Account Mapping hierarchy set that contains hierarchies for mapping accounts from GL to Planning; an Account Mapping node set that contains nodes for mapping accounts from GL to Planning; and a node type converter with the Account (GL) node type as source and Account Mapping (Planning) node type as target that defines how properties are transformed or derived from source nodes to target nodes. A map binding does not create a new dimension or a viewpoint in a view. Reference: Working with Map Bindings - Oracle Help Center; Working with Node Type Converters - Oracle Help Center


NEW QUESTION # 39
In what order do you archive data chain objects?

  • A. Viewpoint, dimension, application
  • B. Application, dimension, viewpoint
  • C. You can archive data chain objects in any order
  • D. Node type, hierarchy set, node set, viewpoint
  • E. Viewpoint, node set, hierarchy set, node type

Answer: D

Explanation:
When you archive data chain objects, you need to follow a specific order based on their dependencies. The order that you archive data chain objects is: node type, hierarchy set, node set, viewpoint. You need to archive node types first, because they are independent of other data chain objects. Then you need to archive hierarchy sets that use those node types. Then you need to archive node sets that use those hierarchy sets or node types. Then you need to archive viewpoints that use those node sets or hierarchy sets. You cannot archive data chain objects in any other order or in any order, because this would cause errors or inconsistencies in your data chain. You cannot archive applications or dimensions directly, because they are not data chain objects. Reference: Archiving and Unarchiving Data Chain Objects - Oracle Help Center


NEW QUESTION # 40
Which two statements are true about the Participant permission?

  • A. You can assign the Participant permission at the application, dimension, hierarchy set, node type, and property level.
  • B. The Participant permission enables you to specify which actions users can take and which properties they can view or edit for node types and hierarchy sets.
  • C. Granting the Participant (Read) permission at the application level lets users browse viewpoints that contain data for any dimension in the application.
  • D. When you grant a user Participant (Write) permission on a hierarchy set, that user is also granted implicit Participant (Write) permission on any node type in that hierarchy set.

Answer: B,D

Explanation:
"When you grant a user Participant (Write) permission on a hierarchy set, that user is also granted implicit Participant (Write) permission on any node type in that hierarchy set." and "The Participant permission enables you to specify which actions users can take and which properties they can view or edit for node types and hierarchy sets." The other statements are false. Granting the Participant (Read) permission at the application level does not let users browse viewpoints that contain data for any dimension in the application, but only lets them browse viewpoints that contain data for dimensions where they have been granted explicit permissions. You cannot assign the Participant permission at the property level.


NEW QUESTION # 41
Which three statements are true about an alternate viewpoint in an unbound state7

  • A. The alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding, but all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Bound.
  • B. The alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding and all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Unbound.
  • C. The alternate viewpoint may be partially bound if it shares data chain objects with a bound viewpoint.
  • D. You cannot use the alternate viewpoint to construct a what-if scenario that is isolated from production.
  • E. Unbound data objects in an alternate viewpoint enable you to model and evaluate potential changes to dimensions in cases where the changes would not conform to a dimension's current binding rules.

Answer: B,E

Explanation:
"An alternate viewpoint is a data object that enables you to create an alternate version of a bound viewpoint that is not used in a binding. All of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Unbound." and "Unbound data objects in an alternate viewpoint enable you to model and evaluate potential changes to dimensions in cases where the changes would not conform to a dimension's current binding rules." The other statements are false. The alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding, but all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Bound. You can use the alternate viewpoint to construct a what-if scenario that is isolated from production. The alternate viewpoint cannot be partially bound if it shares data chain objects with a bound viewpoint.


NEW QUESTION # 42
Maintenance views contain viewpoints from multiple applications. What two types of sharing do these views facilitate?

  • A. Aligning nodes and property values between comparable dimensions in different applications
  • B. Sharing workflows and approvals for comparable dimensions across applications
  • C. Copying hierarchies from one application to another
  • D. Adding new nodes to comparable dimensions across multiple applications

Answer: A,D

Explanation:
Maintenance views are views that contain viewpoints from multiple applications that facilitate sharing data across applications. Maintenance views enable you to add new nodes to comparable dimensions across multiple applications by creating requests or subscriptions that include viewpoints from different applications. Maintenance views also enable you to align nodes and property values between comparable dimensions in different applications by using compare functions or property derivations. Maintenance views do not facilitate sharing workflows and approvals for comparable dimensions across applications, because workflows and approvals are defined at the application level and are not shared across applications. Maintenance views do not facilitate copying hierarchies from one application to another, because hierarchies are defined by hierarchy sets and are not shared across applications. Reference: Working with Maintenance Views - Oracle Help Center2


NEW QUESTION # 43
You are an assignee for a subscription that listens for changes in a source viewpoint, and auto-submit is not enabled.
What happens when a request is submitted that changes the source viewpoint?

  • A. The system sends you a notification with an attachment of the original request items, which you can then load into a new request.
  • B. The system sends you a notification of the original source request and includes a link to manually convert it to a new request for the target viewpoint.
  • C. The system sends you a notification of the original source request, which you can then review and copy into your target viewpoint.
  • D. The system converts the original request items into a new subscription request for the target viewpoint and sends you a notification to review and submit the request.

Answer: D

Explanation:
* The system converts the original request items into a new subscription request for the target viewpoint and sends you a notification to review and submit the request: This option is correct because when a subscription is triggered by changes in a source viewpoint and auto-submit is not enabled, the system creates a new subscription request for the target viewpoint with the same request items as the original request. The system then sends a notification to the subscription assignee to review and submit the request.


NEW QUESTION # 44
You define an approval policy at the dimension level.
What statement correctly describes how this approval policy interacts with related data chain objects?

  • A. The approval policy applies to hierarchy sets but not node sets in the dimension.
  • B. The approval policy applies to only the dimension and does not apply to related data chain objects.
  • C. The approval policy applies to the node types and hierarchy sets in the dimension.
  • D. The approval policy cascades down to only the data chain objects specified in the policy definition.

Answer: C

Explanation:
* This option is correct because when you define an approval policy at the dimension level, it applies to all the node types and hierarchy sets that belong to the dimension. You can also define approval policies at the node type or hierarchy set level to override the dimension level policy.


NEW QUESTION # 45
Which three statements are true about an alternate viewpoint in an unbound state7

  • A. The alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding, but all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Bound.
  • B. The alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding and all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Unbound.
  • C. Unbound data objects in an alternate viewpoint enable you to model and evaluate potential changes to dimensions in cases where the changes would not conform to a dimension's current binding rules.
  • D. You cannot use the alternate viewpoint to construct a what-if scenario that is isolated from production.
  • E. The alternate viewpoint may be partially bound if it shares data chain objects with a bound viewpoint.

Answer: B,E

Explanation:
Explanation
An alternate viewpoint is a viewpoint that lets you see enterprise data organized in a different way. Nodes can be aggregated, rolled up, or summarized using a hierarchy that differs from the hierarchy in the bound viewpoint. An alternate viewpoint can be in an unbound state or a partially bound state. The following statements are true about an alternate viewpoint in an unbound state: the alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding and all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Unbound; unbound data objects in an alternate viewpoint enable you to model and evaluate potential changes to dimensions in cases where the changes would not conform to a dimension's current binding rules; the alternate viewpoint may be partially bound if it shares data chain objects with a bound viewpoint. The following statements are false about an alternate viewpoint in an unbound state: the alternate viewpoint is not used in a binding, but all of the data chain objects that it contains have a binding status of Bound; you cannot use the alternate viewpoint to construct a what-if scenario that is isolated from production. An unbound alternate viewpoint does not have any bound data objects, because it is not related to any external applications. You can use an unbound alternate viewpoint to construct a what-if scenario that is isolated from production, because it does not affect the bound viewpoint or the external applications. References: Defining AlternateViewpoints - Oracle Help Center1; Understanding Bindings and Bound Data Objects - Oracle Help Center2


NEW QUESTION # 46
Which statement is true about permissions?

  • A. By default, when you assign the Participant permission to a user or group, their data access is set to Write.
  • B. Permissions assigned to a dimension do not also apply to the hierarchy sets and node types that they contain.
  • C. When you grant a permission at a higher level, such as Owner, it includes all of the permissions at lower levels, such as Participant.
  • D. The Owner permission on a view enables a user to configure the view and grants full access to the data objects in that view.

Answer: C

Explanation:
Permissions secure access to applications, dimensions, data chain objects, and data. There are four levels of permissions: Owner, Data Manager, Participant (Write), and Participant (Read). When you grant a permission at a higher level, such as Owner, it includes all of the permissions at lower levels. For example, if you grant a user Owner permission on an application, they also have Data Manager and Participant permissions on that application. Permissions assigned to a dimension also apply to the hierarchy sets and node types that they contain. By default, when you assign the Participant permission to a user or group, their data access is set to Read. Reference: Working with Permissions - Oracle Help Center1


NEW QUESTION # 47
A request has a status of "In Flight." In which stage of the approval workflow is the request?

  • A. Submit
  • B. Approve
  • C. Closed
  • D. Review

Answer: B

Explanation:
1. Approve: This option is correct because when a request has a status of "In Flight", it means that it is in the Approve stage of the approval workflow, where it is waiting for approvals from the approvers or data managers.
Reference:
https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/saas/enterprise-data-management-cloud/edmra/approving-and-enriching-requests.html According to the Oracle Help Center, a request has a status of "In Flight" when it is in the Approve stage of the approval workflow. This means that the request is waiting for approval from one or more approvers. The other stages of the approval workflow are Submit, Review, and Closed.


NEW QUESTION # 48
You have a source viewpoint with an entity hierarchy with top nodes defined for Departments and Geography.
Your target viewpoint only has departments.
If you define a subscription that is filtered by the Department top node, what happens when changes are made to the Geography hierarchy in the source viewpoint?

  • A. The system notifies the request assignee that changes were made to the Geography hierarchy, but generates no request items.
  • B. The system creates a subscription request and flags request items for the Geography hierarchy for deletion.
  • C. The system does not create a subscription request.
  • D. The system creates an empty subscription request for tracking purpose, but does not notify the request assignees.

Answer: C

Explanation:
Explanation
When a data manager submits a request in a view that has subscriptions defined, the system only generates subscription requests for the viewpoints that match the filter criteria of the subscriptions. If changes are made to a viewpoint that does not match the filter criteria, the system does not create a subscription request for that viewpoint. References: Creating, Editing, and Validating Subscriptions - Oracle Help Center1


NEW QUESTION # 49
Which two statements are true about importing Planning dimensions?

  • A. When you import data for multiple Planning dimensions from a local file, the file can contain data for all dimensions.
  • B. For Planning dimensions, Enterprise Data Management Cloud supports importing from comma-delimited (.csv) or tab-delimited (.txt) files.
  • C. You can connect to an external Planning application and import dimensions directly into your Enterprise Data Management Cloud instance.
  • D. An application adapter connects your instance to the Planning application outbox and finds dimension files that were exported from the source application.

Answer: C,D


NEW QUESTION # 50
A request was submitted that triggered an approval policy. However, there are not enough approvers available to satisfy the terms of the policy.
What are two resolutions?

  • A. The request is escalated to an application owner, who changes the approval policy to require fewer approvers, at which point the request is committed.
  • B. After exceeding the defined number of approval notifications, the request is pushed back to the original submitter and must be submitted and approved again.
  • C. The request is escalated to a data manager, who grants an exceptional approval and commits the request.
  • D. The request is closed after exceeding the defined number of approval notifications and cannot be committed.

Answer: A,C

Explanation:
1. The request is escalated to a data manager, who grants an exceptional approval and commits the request: This option is correct because when there are not enough approvers available to satisfy the terms of the approval policy, the request is escalated to a data manager after exceeding the defined number of approval notifications. The data manager can then grant an exceptional approval and commit the request.
2. The request is escalated to an application owner, who changes the approval policy to require fewer approvers, at which point the request is committed: This option is correct because when there are not enough approvers available to satisfy the terms of the approval policy, the request is escalated to an application owner after exceeding the defined number of approval notifications. The application owner can then change the approval policy to require fewer approvers, and then approve and commit the request.
Reference:
https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/saas/enterprise-data-management-cloud/edmra/approving-and-enriching-requests.html


NEW QUESTION # 51
Which EPM Automate command can you use to restart services on your instance?

  • A. resetService
  • B. startService
  • C. restartService
  • D. recreateService

Answer: C

Explanation:
Explanation
The restartService command restarts the services on an environment. This command is useful when you want to refresh an environment after performing maintenance tasks such as importing or exporting snapshots or uploading files. References: Using EPM Automate Commands - Oracle Help Center2


NEW QUESTION # 52
You have account dimensions in two different applications that must be kept in sync.
Given a business requirement that nodes added to either application must be shared with the other, what should you do?

  • A. Create two node type converters: one with Application 1 accounts as the source and Application2 accounts as the target, and another with Application2 accounts as the source and Application 1 accounts as the target.
  • B. Create three node type converters: one with Application! accounts as the source and Application2 accounts as the target, another with Application2 accounts as the source and Application! accounts as the target, and a third for bi-directional sharing.
  • C. Create one node type converter with Application! accounts as the source and Application2 accounts as the target, and specify a reverse conversion in requests when sharing in the opposite direction.
  • D. Create one bi-directional node type converter between the two applications.

Answer: A,C

Explanation:
Explanation
To share nodes between applications, you need to create node type converters and maintenance views. Node type converters enable you to transform properties or derive values from source node types to target node types when sharing data across applications. You need to create two node type converters: one with Application 1 accounts as the source and Application2 accounts as the target, and another with Application2 accounts as the source and Application 1 accounts as the target. This way, you can share nodes in both directions. Maintenance views contain viewpoints from multiple applications that facilitate sharing data across applications. You need to create a maintenance view with viewpoints for both the General Ledger account dimension and the Planning account dimension. This way, you can create requests or subscriptions to share nodes between the two dimensions. You do not need to create one bi-directional node type converter or a node type converter for the Account node type in the General Ledger application that uses the Planning Account node type as a source. References: Working with Node Type Converters - Oracle Help Center1; Working with Maintenance Views - Oracle Help Center2


NEW QUESTION # 53
After submitting a request for approval, you discover that you need to make additional changes to it. What two options do you have?

  • A. Recall the request, add the changes, then submit it again for approval.
  • B. Recall the request and delete it. Create a new request with all of the required changes and submit it for approval.
  • C. Create a second request with the additional changes, and submit it for separate approval.
  • D. Push the request back to the submit stage, add the changes, then submit it again for approval.

Answer: A,C

Explanation:
* Create a second request with the additional changes, and submit it for separate approval: This option is correct because you can create another request with the additional changes and submit it for approval while the first request is still in progress. However, this option may create conflicts or dependencies between the requests that need to be resolved later.
* Recall the request, add the changes, then submit it again for approval: This option is correct because you can recall a request that you submitted for approval and make changes to it before submitting it again for approval. However, this option may cause delays in the approval workflow and require rework by the approvers.


NEW QUESTION # 54
You are mapping nodes from dimensions in two source applications to a dimension in a single target application.
How do you set up the mapping hierarchy sets?

  • A. Target nodes and converted source nodes in two separate hierarchies
  • B. Separate hierarchy sets for each source-to-target relationship
  • C. Target nodes in one hierarchy set and converted source nodes in a separate hierarchy set
  • D. Target nodes as parents and converted source nodes as children

Answer: B

Explanation:
Explanation
When you are mapping nodes from dimensions in two source applications to a dimension in a single target application, you need to set up separate hierarchy sets for each source-to-target relationship. This way, you can define the mapping rules and node type converters for each source node type and target node type pair. You cannot use target nodes and converted source nodes in two separate hierarchies, because this would not establish a mapping relationship between them. You cannot use target nodes in one hierarchy set and converted source nodes in a separate hierarchy set, because this would not allow you to export the mappings to the target application. You cannot use target nodes as parents and converted source nodes as children, because this would create a hierarchical relationship instead of a mapping relationship. References: Working with Hierarchy Sets - Oracle Help Center ; Creating Mapping Viewpoints - Oracle Help Center2


NEW QUESTION # 55
Which two items describe the information that you can find in the Custom Validation Report?

  • A. A list of system and application-specific validations
  • B. The date and status of the last time a validation was run
  • C. A list of all manually created validations across all applications
  • D. The actions and properties that trigger the validation check

Answer: A,D

Explanation:
Explanation
The Custom Validation Report is a report that lists all the custom validations that have been created for an application. The report includes information such as: the actions and properties that trigger the validation check, the validation rule expression and message, the node types and hierarchy sets that use the validation, and whether the validation is enabled or disabled. The report does not include a list of all manually created validations across all applications, because it is specific to one application at a time. The report does not include a list of system and application-specific validations, because these are predefined validations that cannot be customized. The report does not include the date and status of the last time a validation was run, because this information is available in the request history or subscription history. References: Working with Custom Validations - Oracle Help Center


NEW QUESTION # 56
Which two things occur during application registration7

  • A. The system imports external application data to determine the application configuration.
  • B. You select an Enterprise Data Management Cloud application type.
  • C. The system generates default data objects based on your selections in the registration wizard.
  • D. You load dimension data from flat files.
  • E. The system generates connections to external applications.

Answer: B,C

Explanation:
According to the Oracle documentation, application registration is the process of creating an Enterprise Data Management Cloud application and defining its configuration. During application registration, you select an application type and the system generates default data objects based on your selections in the registration wizard. The system does not generate connections to external applications, import external application data, or load dimension data from flat files during application registration. These tasks are performed separately after the application is registered.


NEW QUESTION # 57
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The 1z0-1086-22 exam covers a range of topics such as designing and configuring data management workflows, managing metadata and hierarchies, creating and managing data forms, and integrating data from various sources. The exam also tests the candidate's ability to troubleshoot and resolve issues related to data management processes. By passing this exam, candidates can demonstrate their proficiency in implementing Oracle Enterprise Data Management Cloud solutions and can advance their careers in the field of data management.

 

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