Is it possible to create auto-increment based on a specific field? For example i have UserId and Status fields, so for each row with same UserId i need to auto-increment its Status, not global.
There is three thing that come to mind when I read your question. One was an auto incrementing field which acts as your ID number. Updating a table with data that has no unique ID number. Searching for fields with the same Userid to Status
Mt First example is of a creating a table and your AUTO_INCREMENTing number ID:
CREATE TABLE tableNameHere
(
UniqueID int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
FirstName varchar(255) NOT NULL,
StatusOrYourColumn int(100) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (UniqueUD)
)
More on auto incrementation.
You may have already built your table and now want to 'add' additional and or modify your fields using ALTER:
ALTER TABLE tableNameHere StatusOrYourColumn INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY
But be careful, you don't want to overwrite your settings that you have already set.
Another Thing that came to my mind when reading was where you said Status and Userid where the same. You can find these using the WHERE clause like so:
SELECT * FROM tableName WHERE tableName.Userid = anotherTableOrTableName.Status
Using these queries you can update, remake, alter and query your database table.
Related
I have an old MS Access DB which I'm translating to a MySQL DB. I used bullzip to create the database but due to bad design the old MS Access database didn't have a unique primary key for most of the tables.
So I've created a id field but obviously it's empty for each entry, I wonder if there's a simple statement I can use to fill them up with 1, 2, 3, 4 etc...
EDIT:
I think I haven't gotten my question across properly. I know all about auto increment. Thats not the problem.
I have a table, full of records which I need kept and which came from a Access database that didn't have a unique id defined as a field. In otherwords I have fields for firstname, surname etc etc but no field 'id'. This seems absolutely crazy but apparently this database has been well used and never had any unique ids for any tables bar one. Weird!
Anyway, I've created a field in the table for id (and set it to auto increment of course) but obviously all the existing records don't have an id set currently. So I need to create one for each record.
Is there a way to fill all these records with unique numbers using a mysql statement?
Cheers
If you add an new id column to an existing table and make it AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, it will automatically populate it with incrementing values.
mysql> ALTER TABLE TheTable ADD COLUMN id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY;
mysql> SELECT id FROM TheTable;
-- outputs values 1, 2, 3, etc.
If you made an id column but didn't declare it AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, you can populate the column like this:
mysql> SET #id := 0;
mysql> UPDATE TheTable SET id = (#id := #id+1);
Use a predefined AUTO_INCREMENT field, and set the value as NULL when inserting new records, so that it automatically builds up an appropriate incrementer. Aside from that, there is no way (unless using a procedure) to create an incrementing set of values
Use the auto_increment feature of MySQL. MySQL will generate unique numbers for your id column.
For an explanation of the auto_increment feature see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/example-auto-increment.html
If you just want a unique identifier, you can use the uuid() function. It takes up a bit more space than an integer, but it does what you want.
However, I agree with the other answers that you should add an auto increment column and repopulate the table. That is the simplest way to keep the ids unique over time, even as updates takes place, and using a more reasonable amount of storage.
I am not proficient in MySQL, but I have faced this same problem in other DBMS's and here is how I have addressed it when there was an AutoIncrement type facility, but the DBMS had no way to automatically apply it retroactively:
Rename the table you want to add the ID field to. So rename Table1 to Table1_Old.
Create a new Table1 that is a copy of Table1_Old except that it has no data in it.
Add your ID/AutoIncrement column to Table1
Now copy all of the data from Table1_Old to Table1, either skipping or specifying NULL for the ID column. (This is usually a single INSERT..SELECT.. command)
Drop Table1_Old.
The actual specifics and commands vary from DBMS to DBMS, but I have usually been able to find a way to do these steps.
Use AUTO_INCREMENT
CREATE TABLE insect
(
id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
PRIMARY KEY (id),
name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
date DATE NOT NULL,
origin VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL
);
Update
I believe, it seems tough task unless you won't create new table, I will suggest you to use this
SET #rank=0;
SELECT #rank:=#rank+1 AS rank, itemID FROM orders;
It will create a virtual column with the name rank for you, which have unique id value.
I need that the values for a ColumnID, which is a Primary Key, to start at 100 and increment by 5. This condition is asked to be included as a constraint before populating the tables. I already created the tables, I just need to add that constraint. I know I can't use AUTO_INCREMENT because the increase is only by 1. Is there a way to do it in MySQL?
MySQL does not provide any built-in function to create a sequence for a table's rows or columns. But we can generate it via SQL query.
Example:
Let us understand it with the help of the following example. First, we need to create a new table and make sure that there is one column with the AUTO_INCREMENT attribute and that too, as PRIMARY KEY.
Execute the below query to create a table:
CREATE TABLE Insects (
Id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
Name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
Type VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
Origin VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL
);
Then you can alter your column to start from another value:
ALTER TABLE Insects AUTO_INCREMENT=100;
You can check it here.
So, I am looking for a way to sequence the rows of my athena table. I have already tried:
ROW_NUMBER() OVER ()
But then this leads to Query exhausted resources at this scale factor error. It has to be a unique value for every row, so yes it doesn't need to be an integer. The method should be performance effective if it can be.
Please provide SHOW CREATE TABLE for the table in question.
If you don't already have an AUTO_INCREMENT column on the table, consider the following.
ALTER TABLE t
ADD COLUMN id INT UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT NOT NULL,
ADD INDEX(id);
If you don't already have a PRIMARY KEY on the table, do this instead:
ALTER TABLE t
ADD COLUMN id INT UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT NOT NULL,
ADD PRIMARY KEY(id);
You can give each row a unique id, uuid, using the uuid() function. Here are the docs:
https://trino.io/docs/current/functions/uuid.html
I am entering records in the MySQL DB. Now I want to have a "Serial_Number" field that increements automatically whenever a record is entered into the DB.
I don't want this "Serial_Number" field to be the primary key of the DB.
How can I create this field (with the attributes needed to be set).
I am using "SQL YOG" to access MySQL. If you are aware of the SQL YOG then tell me how to do that through SQL YOG.
The AUTO_INCREMENT column has to have a UNIQUE KEY constraint associated to it.
For instance, this will work just fine:
CREATE TABLE AutoNotId
(
Id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
Auto INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT,
UNIQUE (Auto)
);
Edit:
The ALTER statement would look somewhat like this:
ALTER TABLE AutoNotId
MODIFY COLUMN Auto INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT,
ADD UNIQUE (Auto);
I recommended, however the use of the long-hand syntax to specify the name of the UNIQUE constraint; But you can always refer to MySQL's Reference Manual for the exact specifications.
In MySQL tables can only have one auto increment field and they must be indexed.
There can be only one AUTO_INCREMENT column per table, it must be indexed, and it cannot have a DEFAULT value.
Is there a reason you don't want it to be the primary key?
If you want an incrementing value, you could fudge it by running updates after each insert:
SELECT MAX(serial) + 1 FROM myTable;
UPDATE myTable SET serial = <that number> WHERE id = ...
I don't think you can have an auto increment field:
CREATE TABLE `t` (`dd` int(11) NOT NULL)
ALTER TABLE `t` CHANGE `dd` `dd` INT( 11 ) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT
MySQL said: Documentation
#1075 - Incorrect table definition; there can be only one auto column and it must be defined as a key
You cannot do this in MySQL. From the doc:
There can be only one AUTO_INCREMENT
column per table, it must be indexed,
and it cannot have a DEFAULT value. An
AUTO_INCREMENT column works properly
only if it contains only positive
values. Inserting a negative number is
regarded as inserting a very large
positive number. This is done to avoid
precision problems when numbers “wrap”
over from positive to negative and
also to ensure that you do not
accidentally get an AUTO_INCREMENT
column that contains 0.
For MyISAM and BDB tables, you can
specify an AUTO_INCREMENT secondary
column in a multiple-column key. See
Section 3.6.9, “Using AUTO_INCREMENT”.
create table mytable (
ID INT IDENTITY(1,1) PRIMARY KEY,
SN INT IDENTITY(1,1)
)
I am using MySQL for my database. I have a requirement to store a list of users in the system. The user will have both first name and last name.
I cannot have the first name and second name as the primary key. So I need a indexing key. But I do not want to enter the index value every time to add a new row.
I want the system to handle this with auto increment of previous value every time I try to add a new user. Please let me know how to do this.
Also I am supposed to do a search operation on the list of user with the first name. Please let me know the efficient way to do the search as the number of records could be more than a million.
create table users (
id int primary key auto_increment,
name varchar(64),
...
)
See here for more info
Add an INT() id column with auto_increment set. This way, the id column value will be incremented automatically on each INSERT.
To get a unique key without having to specify it, you need an auto_increment field:
create table people (
person_id int primary key auto_increment,
first_name varchar(50),
: : :
);
For efficiently searching first names, you just need an index on the first-name column. A couple of million rows is not a big table, so this should be reasonably efficient.
create index person_index using btree on people (first_name);