A primary key is a field in a table which uniquely identifies each row/record in a database table. Primary keys must contain unique values. A primary key column cannot have NULL values.
A table can have only one primary key, which may consist of single or multiple fields. When multiple fields are used as a primary key, they are called a composite key.
If a table has a primary key defined on any field(s), then you cannot have two records having the same value of that field(s).
Note: You would use these concepts while creating database tables.
Create Primary Key:
Here is the syntax to define ID attribute as a primary key in a CUSTOMERS table.CREATE TABLE CUSTOMERS (
ID INT NOT NULL,
NAME VARCHAR (20) NOT NULL,
AGE INT NOT NULL,
ADDRESS CHAR (25),
SALARY DECIMAL (18, 2),
PRIMARY KEY (ID)
);
To create a PRIMARY KEY constraint on the "ID" column when CUSTOMERS table already exists, use the following SQL syntax:
ALTER TABLE CUSTOMER ADD PRIMARY KEY (ID);
NOTE: If you use the
ALTER TABLE statement to add a primary key, the primary key column(s) must
already have been declared to not contain NULL values (when the table was first
created).For defining a PRIMARY KEY constraint on multiple columns, use the following SQL syntax:
CREATE TABLE CUSTOMERS (
ID INT NOT NULL,
NAME VARCHAR (20) NOT NULL,
AGE INT NOT NULL,
ADDRESS CHAR (25),
SALARY DECIMAL (18, 2),
PRIMARY KEY (ID, NAME)
);
To create
a PRIMARY KEY constraint on the "ID" and "NAMES" columns when
CUSTOMERS table already exists, use the following SQL syntax:ALTER TABLE CUSTOMERS
ADD CONSTRAINT PK_CUSTID PRIMARY KEY (ID, NAME);
Delete Primary Key:
You can clear the primary key constraints from the table, Use Syntax:ALTER TABLE CUSTOMERS DROP PRIMARY KEY ;
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