why I am getting error trying to add Foreign key to table - sql

I Not able to add foreign key to tbl1 referencing tbl2 (Desc), here are the two tables :
please notice Tbl1 includes all values,tbl2 Has more values that doesn't necessarily exists in tbl1
Error(Msg 1776): There are no primary or candidate keys in the referenced table 'tbl2' that match the referencing column list in the foreign key 'fk_desc'.
tbl1:
alter table tbl1 add constraint pk_desc primary key (desc)
The Error:**alter table tbl1 add constraint fk_desc foreign key (desc)
references tbl2(desc)**
Desc
Astrogator
Geologist
Technician
tbl2:
alter table tbl2 add constraint pk_canid_desc primary
key(id,desc)
ID
Desc
1001
Astrogator
1001
Geologist
1001
Technician
2003
Biochemist
thank you for the help,

you cant make Desc that at table tbl2 as a FK while it contains values not exists at the table tbl1

Adding a foreign key is different depending on the flavor of SQL your using. For sql server you would bring up the parent db in SSMS using table design. Select Foreign key relationships and add a new relationship. From there select other table and column which has foreign key. Keep in mind that there needs to exist a foreign key for each Primary record or you will get an error.

Related

How to delete records of a table when its primary key is referred as secondary key in another table?

How to delete records of a table when its primary key is referred as a foreign key in another table in a single query?
DELETE *
FROM table1
FULL OUTER JOIN table2 ON
table1.(Primary key column name) =table2.(Foreign key column name);
try this

While alter table adding foreign key getting error in SQL Server

I am trying to add a foreign key in SQL Server to an existing table, but I'm getting an error. Could any one please help me?
Note: objid is present in both table 1 & table 2
ALTER TABLE table1
ADD CONSTRAINT FK_41_PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY
FOREIGN KEY (Table1 PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY) REFERENCES table2(objid);
Error:
FK_40_PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY. The conflict occurred in database "test", table "dbo.table2", column 'objid'.
Apart from the error in the syntax, I think there are some values in the objid column that doesn't exist in the PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY table. You have to check the values between the two columns. This is why you are creating the foreign key to prevent such things.
The syntax should be something more like this:
ALTER TABLE table1
ADD CONSTRAINT FK_41_PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY
FOREIGN KEY (PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY) REFERENCES table2(objid);
You don't need to qualify the column name.
Do a quick check on you column 'objid' and don't write
FOREIGN KEY (Table1 PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY) REFERENCES table2(objid);
It should be more like:
FOREIGN KEY (PRICE_INST2PRICE_QTY) REFERENCES table2(objid);
without table1, because you're working in table1.

Foreign key constraint with some where clause in SQL Server

I have two tables, one with columns accountid, category, code, name, desc and the other with columns id, accountid, code, reason, desc, active.
Is there any way I can create a constraint such that code in the second table contains only values of code that are in first table with condition where category is somevalue?
One method is a little trick. First, create a unique index on (category, code) in the first table:
create unique index unq_table1_category_code on table1(category, code)
Then create a computed column in table2:
alter table table2 add category as ('somevalue') persisted;
Then create the foreign key relationship:
alter table table2 add constraint fk_somevalue_code
foreign key (category, code) references table1(category, code);
ALTER TABLE table2 WITH CHECK
ADD CONSTRAINT CK_table2category CHECK (category = 'somevalue'),
CONSTRAINT FK_table2code FOREIGN KEY (code) REFERENCES table1 (code);

Creating a foreign key constraint with non-matching data

Greetings!
I have inserted data from sql insert files into an ms sql database. Apperantly this data is not fully complete.
I discovered this when I was trying to make the ERD and create key constraints between tables.
When I try to connect article_review with order1 where order1 has a primary key and article review has a foreign key.
I have a query where it selects all records with non-matching key values:
see image: http://imgur.com/vDbCuG8
So what I want to do now:
insert new rows into article_review with the missing ID values. The values of the other columns do not really matter, they can be NULL or random generated.
A simple join won't really cut it because all of the other columns are non-identical.
ps. all above is needed because ms sql 2016 wont let me create a key constraint between 2 tables where one of them contains a value that is not in the other one and thus throws the error:
'order1' table saved successfully
'article_review' table saved successfully
'review' table
- Unable to create relationship 'FK_review_order1'.
The ALTER TABLE statement conflicted with the FOREIGN KEY constraint "FK_review_order1". The conflict occurred in database "superDatabase", table "dbo.order1", column 'id'.
Do you just want to add the Foreign key for documentation only?
You could add the FK like this:
ALTER TABLE dbo.order1 WITH NOCHECK
ADD CONSTRAINT FK_review_order1 FOREIGN KEY (id) REFERENCES dbo.article_review (id)
note the WITH NOCHECK
This way the foreign key is created, but is not trusted and disabled, which can be seen with this query:
SELECT SCHEMA_NAME(fk.schema_id) AS sch, T.name,
fk.name, is_disabled, is_not_trusted, fk.is_not_for_replication
FROM sys.foreign_keys fk WITH (NOLOCK)
INNER JOIN sys.tables T WITH (NOLOCK) ON T.object_id = fk.parent_object_id
WHERE fk.is_not_trusted = 1
AND fk.is_disabled = 0
ORDER BY SCHEMA_NAME(fk.schema_id), T.name, fk.name;
idea from https://www.brentozar.com/blitz/foreign-key-trusted/

The ALTER TABLE statement conflicted with the FOREIGN KEY constraint

Why does add a foreign key to the tblDomare table result in this error?
The ALTER TABLE statement conflicted with the FOREIGN KEY constraint "FK__tblDomare__PersN__5F7E2DAC". The conflict occurred in database "almu0004", table "dbo.tblBana", column 'BanNR'.
Code
CREATE TABLE tblDomare
(PersNR VARCHAR (15) NOT NULL,
fNamn VARCHAR (15) NOT NULL,
eNamn VARCHAR (20) NOT NULL,
Erfarenhet VARCHAR (5),
PRIMARY KEY (PersNR));
INSERT INTO tblDomare (PersNR,fNamn,eNamn,Erfarenhet)
Values (6811034679,'Bengt','Carlberg',10);
INSERT INTO tblDomare (PersNR,fNamn,eNamn,Erfarenhet)
Values (7606091347,'Josefin','Backman',4);
INSERT INTO tblDomare (PersNR,fNamn,eNamn,Erfarenhet)
Values (8508284163,'Johanna','Backman',1);
CREATE TABLE tblBana
(BanNR VARCHAR (15) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (BanNR));
INSERT INTO tblBana (BanNR)
Values (1);
INSERT INTO tblBana (BanNR)
Values (2);
INSERT INTO tblBana (BanNR)
Values (3);
ALTER TABLE tblDomare
ADD FOREIGN KEY (PersNR)
REFERENCES tblBana(BanNR);
It occurred because you tried to create a foreign key from tblDomare.PersNR to tblBana.BanNR but/and the values in tblDomare.PersNR didn't match with any of the values in tblBana.BanNR. You cannot create a relation which violates referential integrity.
This query was very useful for me. It shows all values that don't have any matches
select FK_column from FK_table
WHERE FK_column NOT IN
(SELECT PK_column from PK_table)
Try this solution:
There is a data item in your table whose associated value doesn't exist in the table you want to use it as a primary key table.
Make your table empty or add the associated value to the second table.
It is possible to create the foreign key using ALTER TABLE tablename WITH NOCHECK ..., which will allow data that violates the foreign key.
"ALTER TABLE tablename WITH NOCHECK ..." option to add the FK -- This solution worked for me.
Remove all existing data from your tables and then make a relation between the tables.
Before You add Foreign key to the table, do the following
Make sure the table must empty or The column data should match.
Make sure it is not null.
If the table contains do not go to design and change, do it manually.
alter table Table 1 add foreign key (Column Name) references Table 2 (Column Name)
alter table Table 1 alter column Column Name attribute not null
I guess, a column value in a foreign key table should match with the column value of the primary key table. If we are trying to create a foreign key constraint between two tables where the value inside one column(going to be the foreign key) is different from the column value of the primary key table then it will throw the message.
So it is always recommended to insert only those values in the Foreign key column which are present in the Primary key table column.
For ex. If the Primary table column has values 1, 2, 3 and in Foreign key column the values inserted are different, then the query would not be executed as it expects the values to be between 1 & 3.
In very simple words your table already has data present in it and the table you are trying to create relationship with does have that Primary key set for the values that are already present.
Either delete all the values of the existing table.
Add all the values of foreign key reference in the new table.
Try DELETE the current datas from tblDomare.PersNR . Because the values in tblDomare.PersNR didn't match with any of the values in tblBana.BanNR.
When you define a Foreign Key in table B referencing the Primary Key of table A it means that when a value is in B, it must be in A. This is to prevent unconsistent modifications to the tables.
In your example, your tables contain:
tblDomare with PRIMARY KEY (PersNR):
PersNR |fNamn |eNamn |Erfarenhet
-----------|----------|-----------|----------
6811034679 |'Bengt' |'Carlberg' |10
7606091347 |'Josefin' |'Backman' |4
8508284163 |'Johanna' |'Backman' |1
---------------------------------------------
tblBana:
BanNR
-----
1
2
3
-----
This statement:
ALTER TABLE tblDomare
ADD FOREIGN KEY (PersNR)
REFERENCES tblBana(BanNR);
says that any line in tblDomare with key PersNR must have a correspondence in table tblBana on key BanNR. Your error is because you have lines inserted in tblDomare with no correspondence in tblBana.
2 solutions to fix your issue:
either add lines in tblBana with BanNR in (6811034679, 7606091347, 8508284163)
or remove all lines in tblDomare that have no correspondence in tblBana (but your table would be empty)
General advice: you should have the Foreign Key constraint before populating the tables. Foreign keys are here to prevent the user of the table from filling the tables with inconsistencies.
i had this error too
as Smutje reffered make sure that you have not a value in foreign key column of your base foreign key table that is not in your reference table i.e(every value in your base foreign key table(value of a column that is foreign key) must also be in your reference table column)
its good to empty your base foreign key table first then set foreign keys
the data you have entered a table(tbldomare) aren't match a data you have assigned primary key table. write between tbldomare and add this word (with nocheck) then execute your code.
for example you entered a table tbldomar this data
INSERT INTO tblDomare (PersNR,fNamn,eNamn,Erfarenhet)
Values (6811034679,'Bengt','Carlberg',10);
and you assigned a foreign key table to accept only 1,2,3.
you have two solutions one is delete the data you have entered a table then execute the code. another is write this word (with nocheck) put it between your table name and add
like this
ALTER TABLE tblDomare with nocheck
ADD FOREIGN KEY (PersNR)
REFERENCES tblBana(BanNR);
Smutje is correct and Chad HedgeCock offered a great layman's example.
Id like to build on Chad's example by offering a way to find/delete those records.
We will use Customer as the Parent and Order as the child. CustomerId is the common field.
select * from Order Child
left join Customer Parent on Child.CustomerId = Parent.CustomerId
where Parent.CustomerId is null
if you are reading this thread... you will get results. These are orphaned children. select * from Order Child
left join Customer Parent on Child.CustomerId = Parent.CustomerId
where Parent.CustomerId is null Note the row count in the bottom right.
Go verify w/ whomever you need to that you are going to delete these rows!
begin tran
delete Order
from Order Child
left join Customer Parent on Child.CustomerId = Parent.CustomerId
where Parent.CustomerId is null
Run the first bit.
Check that row count = what you expected
commit the tran
commit tran
Be careful. Someone's sloppy programming got you into this mess. Make sure you understand the why before you delete the orphans. Maybe the parent needs to be restored.
From our end, this is the scenario:
We have an existing table in the database with records.
Then I introduces a NOT nullable foreign key
After executing the update i got this error.
How did i solve you ask?
SOLUTION: I just removed all the records of the table, then tried to update the database and it was successful.
This happens to me, since I am designing my database, I notice that I change my seed on my main table, now the relational table has no foreign key on the main table.
So I need to truncate both tables, and it now works!
You should see if your tables has any data on the rows. If "yes" then you should truncate the table(s) or else you can make them to have the same number of data at tblDomare.PersNR to tblBana.BanNR and vise-verse.
In my scenario, using EF, upon trying to create this new Foreign Key on existing data, I was wrongly trying to populate the data (make the links) AFTER creating the foreign key.
The fix is to populate your data before creating the foreign key since it checks all of them to see if the links are indeed valid. So it couldn't possibly work if you haven't populated it yet.
I encounter some issue in my project.
In child table, there isn't any record Id equals 1 and 11
I inserted DEAL_ITEM_THIRD_PARTY_PO table which Id equals 1 and 11 then I can create FK
Please first delete data from that table and then run the migration again. You will get success
I had the same problem.
My issue was having nullable: true in column (migration file):
AddColumn("dbo.table", "column", c => c.Int(nullable: true));
Possible Solutions:
Change nullable 'false' to 'true'. (Not Recommended)
Change property type from int to int? (Recommended)
And if required, change this later after adding column > then missing field data in previous records
If you've changed an existing property from nullable to non-nullable:
3) Fill the column data in database records
A foreign key constraint in a child table must have a parent table with a primary key. The primary key must be unique. The foreign key value must match a value in the patent table primary key
When you alter table column from nullable to not nullable column where this column is foreign key, you must :
Firstly, initialize this column with value (because it is foreign
key not nullable).
After that you can alter your table column normally.
Please try below query:
CREATE TABLE tblBana
(BanNR VARCHAR (15) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
);
CREATE TABLE tblDomare
(PersNR VARCHAR (15) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
fNamn VARCHAR (15) NOT NULL,
eNamn VARCHAR (20) NOT NULL,
Erfarenhet VARCHAR (5),
FK_tblBana_Id VARCHAR (15) references tblBana (BanNR)
);
INSERT INTO tblBana (BanNR)
Values (3);
INSERT INTO tblDomare (PersNR,fNamn,eNamn,Erfarenhet,FK_tblBana_Id)
Values (8508284173,'Johanna','Backman',1,3);
or you can use this
SELECT fk_id FROM dbo.tableA
Except
SELECT fk_id From dbo.tableB
and just FYI, in case you do all of your data reference checks and find no bad data...apparently it is not possible to create a foreign key constraint between two tables and fields where those fields are the primary key in both tables! Do not ask me how I know this.