Oracle databases are, by default, case sensitive; however, they will also, by default, convert everything to upper-case so that the case sensitivity is abstracted from you, the user.
This is useful so you can do:
SELECT no_constat FROM cef_constat;
SELECT NO_CONSTAT FROM CEF_CONSTAT;
SELECT No_Constat FROM Cef_Constat;
SELECT No_CoNsTaT FROM CeF_CoNsTaT;
and they all give the same result but the database will apply its default behaviour and convert the identifiers to upper case.
However, if you use double quotes then oracle will respect your use of case. In your example, you need to have a case-sensitive alias for the column name (and the column name and table name can have any case):
SELECT no_constat as "noFolder" FROM cef_constat;
SELECT NO_CONSTAT as "noFolder" FROM CEF_CONSTAT;
SELECT No_Constat as "noFolder" FROM Cef_Constat;
SELECT No_CoNsTaT as "noFolder" FROM CeF_CoNsTaT;
or you could even force case-sensitivity (via double-quotes) on all the identifiers, in which case you need to use the exact case used stored in the data dictionary, which is upper case, for the table and column names:
SELECT "NO_CONSTAT" as "noFolder" FROM "CEF_CONSTAT";