The CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE statements allow many attributes of tables to be set, including column constraints and checks. This section shows how to set table attributes using the primary and foreign keys as an example.
The following statement creates the same skill table as before, except that a primary key is added:
CREATE TABLE skill ( skill_id INTEGER NOT NULL, skill_name CHAR( 20 ) NOT NULL, skill_type CHAR( 20 ) NOT NULL, primary key( skill_id ) )
The primary key values must be unique for each row in the table which, in this case, means that you cannot have more than one row with a given skill_id. Each row in a table is uniquely identified by its primary key.
Columns in the primary key are not allowed to contain NULL. You must specify NOT NULL on the column in the primary key.
Creating a primary key in Sybase Central
Connect to the database.
Click the Tables folder for that database.
Right-click the table you wish to modify, and select Properties from the pop-up menu to display its property sheet.
Click the Columns tab, select the column name, and either click Add to Key or Remove from Key. Column values must be unique.
For more information, see the Sybase Central online Help.
Primary key column order is based on the order of the columns during table creation. It is not based on the order of the columns as specified in the primary key declaration.
You can create a table named emp_skill, which holds a description of each employee's skill level for each skill in which they are qualified, as follows:
CREATE TABLE emp_skill( emp_id INTEGER NOT NULL, skill_id INTEGER NOT NULL, "skill level" INTEGER NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY( emp_id, skill_id ), FOREIGN KEY REFERENCES employee, FOREIGN KEY REFERENCES skill )
The emp_skill table definition has a primary key that consists of two columns: the emp_id column and the skill_id column. An employee may have more than one skill, and so appear in several rows, and several employees may possess a given skill, so that the skill_id may appear several times.
The emp_skill table also has two foreign keys. The foreign key entries indicate that the emp_id column must contain a valid employee number that is a primary key in the skill table from the employee table, and that the skill_id must contain a valid entry that is a primary key in the skill table from the skill table.
A table can only have one primary key defined, but it may have as many foreign keys as necessary.
You cannot create foreign key constraints on temporary tables of any kind—local, global, or automatic.
For more information about valid strings and identifiers, see the chapter “SQL Language Elements” in the Sybase IQ Reference Manual.
Each foreign key relationship relates a candidate key (primary key and unique constraint) in one column to a column in another table, which becomes the foreign key.
Creating a foreign key in Sybase Central
Connect to the database.
Click the Tables folder for that database.
Click the table holding the primary key, and drag it to the foreign key table.
When the primary key table is dropped on the foreign key table, the Foreign Key Wizard is displayed, which leads you through the process of creating the foreign key.
For more information, see the Sybase Central online Help.
For more information about using primary and foreign keys, see Chapter 9, “Ensuring Data Integrity”