UNIQUE constraint
The UNIQUE
constraint uniquely identifies each record in a database table.
The UNIQUE and
PRIMARY KEY constraints both provide a guarantee for uniqueness for a column or
set of columns.
A PRIMARY KEY
constraint automatically has a UNIQUE constraint defined on it.
Note that you can
have many UNIQUE constraints per table, but only one PRIMARY KEY constraint per
table.
SQL UNIQUE Constraint on CREATE TABLE
The following SQL
creates a UNIQUE constraint on the "P_Id" column when the
"Persons" table is created:
MySQL:
CREATE TABLE
Persons
(
P_Id int NOT
NULL,
LastName
varchar(255) NOT NULL,
FirstName
varchar(255),
Address
varchar(255),
City
varchar(255),
UNIQUE (P_Id)
)
SQL Server /
Oracle / MS Access:
CREATE TABLE
Persons
(
P_Id int NOT NULL
UNIQUE,
LastName
varchar(255) NOT NULL,
FirstName
varchar(255),
Address
varchar(255),
City varchar(255)
)
To allow naming
of a UNIQUE constraint, and for defining a UNIQUE constraint on multiple
columns, use the following SQL syntax:
MySQL / SQL
Server / Oracle / MS Access:
CREATE TABLE
Persons
(
P_Id int NOT
NULL,
LastName
varchar(255) NOT NULL,
FirstName
varchar(255),
Address
varchar(255),
City
varchar(255),
CONSTRAINT
uc_PersonID UNIQUE (P_Id,LastName)
)
SQL UNIQUE Constraint on ALTER TABLE
To create a
UNIQUE constraint on the "P_Id" column when the table is already
created, use the following SQL:
MySQL / SQL
Server / Oracle / MS Access:
ALTER TABLE
Persons
ADD UNIQUE (P_Id)
To allow naming
of a UNIQUE constraint, and for defining a UNIQUE constraint on multiple
columns, use the following SQL syntax:
MySQL / SQL
Server / Oracle / MS Access:
ALTER TABLE
Persons
ADD CONSTRAINT
uc_PersonID UNIQUE (P_Id,LastName)
To DROP a UNIQUE Constraint
To drop a UNIQUE
constraint, use the following SQL:
MySQL:
ALTER TABLE
Persons
DROP INDEX
uc_PersonID
SQL Server /
Oracle / MS Access:
ALTER TABLE
Persons
DROP CONSTRAINT
uc_PersonID
1 Comments
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