Oracle After INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE Trigger:-
This statement specifies that Oracle will fire this trigger AFTER the INSERT/UPDATE or DELETE operation is executed.

Syntax:-
  

    CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] TRIGGER trigger_name  
    AFTER INSERT or UPDATE or DELETE  
     ON table_name  
      [ FOR EACH ROW ]  
    DECLARE  
       -- variable declarations  
    BEGIN  
       -- trigger code  
    EXCEPTION  
       WHEN ...  
       -- exception handling  
    END;  



Parameters:-
OR REPLACE: It is an optional parameter. It is used to re-create the trigger if it already exists. It facilitates you to change the trigger definition without using a DROP TRIGGER statement.
trigger_name: It specifies the name of the trigger that you want to create.
AFTER INSERT or UPDATE or DELETE: It specifies that the trigger will be fired after the INSERT or UPDATE or DELETE operation is executed.
table_name: It specifies the name of the table on which trigger operation is being performed.

Demerit/Limitations
  1. AFTER trigger cannot be created on a view.
  2. You cannot update the OLD values.
  3. You can only update the NEW values.

Oracle AFTER Trigger Example:- Consider, you have a "suppliers" table with the following parameters.
  

     CREATE TABLE  "SUPPLIERS"   
       (    "SUPPLIER_ID" NUMBER,   
        "SUPPLIER_NAME" VARCHAR2(4000),   
        "SUPPLIER_ADDRESS" VARCHAR2(4000)  
       )  
    /  



You can use the following CREATE TRIGGER query to create a AFTER INSERT or UPDATE or DELETE Trigger:
  

    CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER  "SUPPLIERS_T2"   
    AFTER  
    insert or update or delete on "SUPPLIERS"  
    for each row  
    begin  
    when the person performs insert/update/delete operations into the table.  
    end;  
    /  
    ALTER TRIGGER  "SUPPLIERS_T2" ENABLE  
    /  



Here the trigger name is "SUPPLIERS_T2" and it is fired AFTER the insert or update or delete operation is executed on the table "suppliers".