lets say I have an account object in my application, which currently represented as:
CREATE TABLE Account (
accountId int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name varchar(255) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (accountId)
);
Now, Account object need to also have Solution field...and Status have 4 different possible values:
Solution1, Solution2, Solution3, Solution4
What would be the right way to represent it in the database?
Account can have few statuses, and status can have few accounts...
So at first I thought create in the db table of Solutions and than have another table to hold the relationship, but its seems too complicated for a field that have only 4 possible values...
Create a junction table to represent the relationships between accounts and solutions:
CREATE TABLE account_solution (
accountId int NOT NULL,
solutionId int NOT NULL
PRIMARY KEY (accountId, solutionId)
)
For your solution table, since there are only 4 values, you might be able to take advantage of MySQL's enum type, e.g.
CREATE TABLE solution
solutionId int NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
status ENUM('Solution1', 'Solution2', 'Solution3', 'Solution4')
);
You can use set Mysql SET type
CREATE TABLE Account (
accountId int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name varchar(255) NOT NULL,
status set('Solution1','Solution2','Solution3','Solution4') NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (accountId)
);
And if you want to select a specific status
SELECT *
FROM `Account`
WHERE FIND_IN_SET( 'Solution2', `status` ) >0
I saw the following SQL code. I perfectly understand it. But what am not getting is what the 66 in the code does.
CREATE TABLE `wordpress`.`campaign_queue` (
`id` BIGINT(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , PRIMARY KEY (`id`(66))
) ENGINE = InnoDB;
Explanation of the query: it is telling MySQL to create a sub part key* on the first 66 letters of id column. This only works for string types, so that query will return an error unless you change the field type to String
This give you error:
CREATE TABLE `campaign_queue1` (
`id` BIGINT(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , PRIMARY KEY (`id`(66))
) ENGINE = InnoDB;
because the (66) is to set string length.
Incorrect prefix key; the used key part isn't a string, the used length is longer than the key part, or the storage engine doesn't support unique prefix keys
If you change the type to VARCHAR then the problem would be with the AUTO_INCREMENT
CREATE TABLE `campaign_queue2` (
`id` VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, PRIMARY KEY (`id`(10))
) ENGINE = InnoDB;
Incorrect column specifier for column 'id'
My Query:
INSERT INTO `test` (`name`)
SELECT DISTINCT c4
FROM `imp_asset` WHERE c4 !='' ORDER BY c4 ASC;
Error Code: 1062
Duplicate entry '0' for key 'PRIMARY'
My Test table:
Field Type
id int(11) NOT NULL
name varchar(200) NULL
Try to make your table as:
mysql> CREATE TABLE test(
id int(11) NOT NULL,
name varchar(200) NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id))
or if the table is already created then try to alter it using the ALTER statement.
alter table test modify column id INT auto_increment;
The problem is that ID is of type INT and is a primary key, but on your insert query you are not specifying any value for ID and there's no default value defined.
You have to make your ID column as an auto_increment:
alter table test modify column id int auto_increment;
Please see an example fiddle here.
Hi I have created two tables in a database. one is omconst another one is omstarline using the following sql:
CREATE TABLE "omconst" ([id] INTEGER NOT NULL UNIQUE,
[hr] INTEGER,
[name] TEXT,
[vmag] REAL,
PRIMARY KEY(id)
)
CREATE TABLE [omstarline] ([id] INTEGER NOT NULL UNIQUE,
[begin] INTEGER,
[end] INTEGER,
[name] TEXT,
PRIMARY KEY(id)
)
actually, I want to delete the record of table omconst
if omconst.hr != omstarline.begin
or
omconst.hr != omstarline.end.
How to use the SQL Query to do this? thanks in advance...
You can issue a delete statement using the not exists operator:
DELETE FROM omconst
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT *
FROM omstarline
WHERE omconst.he IN (begin ,end)
Scenario:
I have a table which references two foreign keys, and for each unique combination of these foreign keys, has its own auto_increment column. I need to implement a Composite Key that will help identify the row as unique using combination of these three (one foreign keys and one auto_increment column, and one other column with non-unique values)
Table:
CREATE TABLE `issue_log` (
`sr_no` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ,
`app_id` INT NOT NULL ,
`test_id` INT NOT NULL ,
`issue_name` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL ,
primary key (app_id, test_id,sr_no)
);
Of course, there has to be something wrong with my query, because of which the error thrown is:
ERROR 1075: Incorrect table definition; there can be only one auto
column and it must be defined as a key
What I am trying to achieve:
I have an Application Table (with app_id as its primary key), each Application has a set of Issues to be resolved, and each Application has multiple number of tests (so the test_id col)
The sr_no col should increment for unique app_id and test_id.
i.e. The data in table should look like:
The database engine is InnoDB.
I want to achieve this with as much simplicity as possible (i.e. avoid triggers/procedures if possible - which was suggested for similar cases on other Questions).
You can't have MySQL do this for you automatically for InnoDB tables - you would need to use a trigger or procedure, or user another DB engine such as MyISAM. Auto incrementing can only be done for a single primary key.
Something like the following should work
DELIMITER $$
CREATE TRIGGER xxx BEFORE INSERT ON issue_log
FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
SET NEW.sr_no = (
SELECT IFNULL(MAX(sr_no), 0) + 1
FROM issue_log
WHERE app_id = NEW.app_id
AND test_id = NEW.test_id
);
END $$
DELIMITER ;
You can do this with myISAM and BDB engines. InnoDB does not support this. Quote from MySQL 5.0 Reference Manual.
For MyISAM and BDB tables you can specify AUTO_INCREMENT on a secondary column in a multiple-column index. In this case, the generated value for the AUTO_INCREMENT column is calculated as MAX(auto_increment_column) + 1 WHERE prefix=given-prefix.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/example-auto-increment.html
I don't fully understand your increment requirement on the test_id column, but if you want an ~autoincrement sequence that restarts on every unique combination of (app_id, test_id), you can do an INSERT ... SELECT FROM the same table, like so:
mysql> INSERT INTO `issue_log` (`sr_no`, `app_id`, `test_id`, `issue_name`) SELECT
IFNULL(MAX(`sr_no`), 0) + 1 /* next sequence number */,
3 /* desired app_id */,
1 /* desired test_id */,
'Name of new row'
FROM `issue_log` /* specify the table name as well */
WHERE `app_id` = 3 AND `test_id` = 1 /* same values as in inserted columns */
This assumes a table definition with no declared AUTO_INCREMENT column. You're essentially emulating autoincrement behavior with the IFNULL(MAX()) + 1 clause, but the manual emulation works on arbitrary columns, unlike the built-in autoincrement.
Note that the INSERT ... SELECT being a single query ensures atomicity of the operation. InnoDB will gap-lock the appropriate index, and many concurrent processes can execute this kind of query while still producing non-conflicting sequences.
You can use a unique composite key for sr_no,app_id & test_id. You cannot use incremental in sr_no as this is not unique.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `issue_log` (
`sr_no` int(11) NOT NULL,
`app_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`test_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`issue_name` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE KEY `app_id` (`app_id`,`test_id`,`sr_no`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB ;
I have commented out unique constraint violation in sql fiddle to demonstrate (remove # in line 22 of schema and rebuild schema )
This is what I wanted
id tenant
1 1
2 1
3 1
1 2
2 2
3 2
1 3
2 3
3 3
My current table definition is
CREATE TABLE `test_trigger` (
`id` BIGINT NOT NULL,
`tenant` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`,`tenant`)
);
I created one table for storing the current id for each tenant.
CREATE TABLE `get_val` (
`tenant` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`next_val` int NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`tenant`,`next_val`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB ;
Then I created this trigger which solve my problem
DELIMITER $$
CREATE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT
ON test_trigger
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
UPDATE get_val SET next_val = next_val + 1 WHERE tenant = new.tenant;
set new.id = (select next_val from get_val where tenant=new.tenant);
END$$
DELIMITER ;
This approach will be thread safe also because any insertion for the same tenant will happen sequentially because of the update query in the trigger and for different tenants insertions will happen parallelly.
Just add key(sr_no) on auto-increment column:
CREATE TABLE `issue_log` (
`sr_no` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ,
`app_id` INT NOT NULL ,
`test_id` INT NOT NULL ,
`issue_name` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL ,
primary key (app_id, test_id,sr_no),
key (`sr_no`)
);
Why don't you try to change the position of declare fields as primary key, since when you use "auto_increment" it has to be referenced as the first. Like in the following example
CREATE TABLE `issue_log` (
`sr_no` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ,
`app_id` INT NOT NULL ,
`test_id` INT NOT NULL ,
`issue_name` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL ,
primary key (sr_no,app_id, test_id)
);