As with all tables and views, data dictionary views are different ways to present data from the data dictionary tables. The dictionary TABLES are the main source of dictionary data. The same table may support several views. The views (which are calculated on the fly when they are queried, they are not STORED in the database) may present different data from the same table, based for example on the user who is querying the data.
Take the DBA_TABLES, ALL_TABLES and USER_TABLES views as an example. They draw from a single stored dictionary table; however, they have different columns, different WHERE clauses - to present different sets of rows - and ALL_TABLES and USER_TABLES will present different data based on who the user is.
Dictionary VIEWS may also present data from several dictionary TABLES in a single result set (through joins and such), or processed data (such as aggregates) - no different from the way views are used in a database in general, no special connection to them being "data dictionary" views.
EDIT
I was never curious to check the definition of the DBA_TABLES
view. It's not hard to find it. Reading it, I realized that one thing I said above is incorrect. DBA_TABLES
itself is not based on a single base dictionary table; rather, it is the result of the join of several other tables and views (which may themselves have non-trivial definitions). Here is the FROM
section of the view definition of DBA_TABLES
in Oracle 12.2.0.1:
...
from sys.user$ u, sys.ts$ ts, sys.seg$ s, sys.obj$ co, sys.tab$ t,
sys."_CURRENT_EDITION_OBJ" o,
sys.obj$ cx, sys.user$ cu, x$ksppcv ksppcv, x$ksppi ksppi,
sys.deferred_stg$ ds, sys.imsvc$ svc
-- where
...