I want to have only 3 columns (departure_City_Id, arrival_City_Id, Emp_number). However, when I come to insert value , it says that I have 4 columns - oracle

For the Epms table, I want to have only 3 columns (departure_City_Id, arrival_City_Id, Emp_number). However, when I come to insert value, it says that I have 4 columns. The extra one for City_Id. All I want is to avoid having City_Id column in this table. I declare it because I need it just as FK.
CREATE TABLE City (
City_Id char(3),
state varchar(30),
Primary key (City_Id)
);
create table Emps (
Emp_number varchar(30) primary key,
City_Id char(3),
departure_City_Id char(3),
arrival_City_Id char(3),
FOREIGN KEY (City_Id)
REFERENCES City(City_Id),
FOREIGN KEY (City_Id)
REFERENCES City(City_Id)
);

This is pretty straightforward, just specify e.g. , FOREIGN KEY (arrival_city_id) REFERENCES city(city_id) and you'll get an index.
CREATE TABLE emps (
emp_number varchar(30) NOT NULL,
city_id char(3) NOT NULL,
departure_city_id char(3) NOT NULL,
arrival_city_id char(3) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (emp_number),
KEY city_id (city_id),
KEY departure_city_id (departure_city_id),
KEY arrival_city_id (arrival_city_id),
CONSTRAINT emps_ibfk_1 FOREIGN KEY (city_id) REFERENCES city (city_id),
CONSTRAINT emps_ibfk_2 FOREIGN KEY (departure_city_id) REFERENCES city (city_id),
CONSTRAINT emps_ibfk_3 FOREIGN KEY (arrival_city_id) REFERENCES city (city_id)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;

" I want is to avoid having City_Id column in this table. I declare it because I need it just as FK."
But you don't need it. The foreign key columns are the arrival and departure columns, and those are the ones you must reference in the constraint declarations:
create table Emps (
Emp_number varchar(30) primary key,
departure_City_Id char(3),
arrival_City_Id char(3),
FOREIGN KEY (departure_City_Id)
REFERENCES City(City_Id),
FOREIGN KEY (City_Id)
REFERENCES City(arrival_City_Id)
);
Naming constraints is optional but you may find it helpful when debugging foreign key failures, especially when a table has multiple constraints referencing the same parent key.

Related

ORA-02256: number of referencing columns must match referenced [duplicate]

This question already has an answer here:
ORA-02256: referencing foreign key
(1 answer)
Closed last year.
CREATE TABLE Goft_ForeEver_cus(
customer_Id VARCHAR(10),
first_Name VARCHAR2(20) CONSTRAINT sys_cus_fName_nn NOT NULL,
last_Name VARCHAR2(20) CONSTRAINT sys_cus_lName_nn NOT NULL,
girt_Card_Amount NUMBER(5,2) CONSTRAINT sys_cus_gca_nn NOT NULL,
email VARCHAR2(30) CONSTRAINT sys_cus_email_ck CHECK (email ='%[^a-z,0-9,#,.,_,-]%' ) CONSTRAINT sys_cus_email_nn NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT sys_cus_pk PRIMARY KEY(customer_Id)
);
ALTER TABLE Goft_ForeEver_cus
ADD CONSTRAINT sys_cus_email_UK UNIQUE (email);
CREATE TABLE Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info(
course_Name VARCHAR2(20),
city VARCHAR2(30) CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_city_nn NOT NULL,
prov VARCHAR2(20) CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_prov_nn NOT NULL,
postal_Code VARCHAR2(10) CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_posC_nn NOT NULL,
star_rating NUMBER(1,1),
discript VARCHAR2(200) CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_descript_uk UNIQUE,
year_Build DATE CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_date_nn NOT NULL,
court_length Number(5,2)
CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_courtL_ck CHECK( court_length = 'YARD')
CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_courtL_nn NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_pk PRIMARY KEY (course_Name, star_rating )
);
CREATE TABLE Goft_ForeEver_favorite_courses(
course_Name VARCHAR2(20),
customer_Id VARCHAR2(10),
CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_PK PRIMARY KEY(course_Name,customer_Id),
CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (customer_Id) REFERENCES Goft_ForeEver_cus(customer_Id),
CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_FK2 FOREIGN KEY (course_Name) REFERENCES Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info(course_Name)
);
);
Error
Error report - ORA-02256: number of referencing columns must match referenced columns 02256. 00000 - "number of referencing columns must match referenced columns" *Cause: The number of columns in the foreign-key referencing list is not equal to the number of columns in the referenced list. *Action: Make sure that the referencing columns match the referenced columns.
It is because Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info has primary key as
CONSTRAINT sys_courtInf_pk PRIMARY KEY (course_Name, star_rating )
while Goft_ForeEver_favorite_courses that references it has foreign key as
CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_FK2 FOREIGN KEY (course_Name) REFERENCES Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info(course_Name)
See? You're referencing COURSE_NAME, STAR_RATING composite key by COURSE_NAME only - that won't work.
Therefore, either remove STAR_RATING from the primary key in Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info, add STAR_RATING to Goft_ForeEver_favorite_courses, or redesign everything alltogether.
Illustration (SQL*Plus, which points to the error):
SQL> CREATE TABLE Goft_ForeEver_favorite_courses(
2 course_Name VARCHAR2(20),
3 customer_Id VARCHAR2(10),
4 CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_PK PRIMARY KEY(course_Name,customer_Id),
5 CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (customer_Id) REFERENCES Goft_ForeEver_cus(customer_Id),
6 CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_FK2 FOREIGN KEY (course_Name) REFERENCES Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info(course_Name)
7 );
CONSTRAINT sys_favCourt_FK2 FOREIGN KEY (course_Name) REFERENCES Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info(course_Name)
*
ERROR at line 6:
ORA-02270: no matching unique or primary key for this column-list
SQL>
The problem here is you have declared the "course_Name" along with "star_rating" column as composite primary key in Goft_ForeEver_Course_Info table whereas you are referencing only one column "course_Name" in sys_favCourt_FK2 foreign key declaration in Goft_ForeEver_favorite_courses table.

data base oracle foreign key error ORA-02270: no matching unique or primary key for this column-list

while making foreign key in player table it shows following error
ORA-02270: no matching unique or primary key for this column-list
create table person
(
per_ssn number(10) not null,
per_name varchar2(30) not null,
CONSTRAINT pk_PersonID PRIMARY KEY (per_ssn,per_name)
);
create table Player
(
player_ssn number(10) not null,
player_name varchar2(30) not null,
football_club_name varchar2(30) not null,
p_age number(2) not null,
p_weight number(3) not null,
p_height number(10) not null,
country varchar2(20) not null,
p_starting_date date not null,
p_ending_date date not null
);
alter table Player
add constraint player_ssn
FOREIGN KEY (player_ssn)
REFERENCING person (per_ssn)on delete cascade
I want to make two primary keys in person table and then want to refer these
primary keys in player table.
If I make one primary key and then refer it in player table, then it does not show error but I want to make two primary keys.
You should be referencing per_ssn,per_name because that is your PK on person.
Anyway, think about making per_ssn your PK in person table
alter table Player
add constraint player_ssn
FOREIGN KEY (player_ssn,player_name)
REFERENCING person (per_ssn,per_name)on delete cascade

Creating table in Oracle 11g with multiple foreign keys with - ORA-00922: missing or invalid option

I followed the previous instruction of placing commas after each of the CONSTRAINTS. However, on this table, it's giving me the following error message:
ORA-02264: name already used by an existing constraint
All the foreign key tables that are associated with this table are created successfully. What is missing here?
CREATE TABLE FIELD (
ENCT_ID VARCHAR2(25) NOT NULL,
FLD_NUM NUMBER NOT NULL,
FLD_DESC VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL,
SYMPT_CODE VARCHAR2(25),
DIAG_CODE VARCHAR2(25),
TEST_ID VARCHAR2(25),
RM_ID VARCHAR2(10) NOT NULL,
AX_CODE VARCHAR2(25) NOT NULL,
PROV_ID VARCHAR2(25) NOT NULL,
MED_NDC VARCHAR2(25),
PRIMARY KEY (ENCT_ID, FLD_NUM),
CONSTRAINT FK_ENCOUNTER FOREIGN KEY (ENCT_ID) REFERENCES ENCOUNTER(ENCT_ID),
CONSTRAINT FK_SYMPTOM FOREIGN KEY (SYMPT_CODE) REFERENCES SYMPTOM(SYMPT_CODE),
CONSTRAINT FK_DIAGNOSIS FOREIGN KEY (DIAG_CODE) REFERENCES DIAGNOSIS(DIAG_CODE),
CONSTRAINT FK_TEST FOREIGN KEY (TEST_ID) REFERENCES TEST(TEST_ID),
CONSTRAINT FK_ROOM FOREIGN KEY (RM_ID) REFERENCES ROOM(RM_ID),
CONSTRAINT FK_ASSESSMENT FOREIGN KEY (AX_CODE) REFERENCES ASSESSMENT(AX_CODE),
CONSTRAINT FK_PROVIDER FOREIGN KEY (PROV_ID) REFERENCES PROVIDER(PROV_ID),
CONSTRAINT FK_MEDICATION FOREIGN KEY (MED_NDC) REFERENCES MEDICATION(MED_NDC));
CREATE TABLE FIELD (
ENCT_ID VARCHAR2(25) PRIMARY KEY,
FLD_NUM NUMBER PRIMARY KEY,
FLD_DESC VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL,...
Remove any one primary key. It will be the index for the table. Like a School text books have only one index, same way, every table will have only one primary key.

Can a unique key ( not a primary key) be a foreign key to other table?

I have two table students and studentsprofilepic
'username' from students is unique key of the table
it is referenced as foreign key for the 'studentsprofilepic' table
the DDL for the tables are
CREATE TABLE students (
id NUMBER,
username VARCHAR2(30),
password VARCHAR2(30),
firstname VARCHAR2(30),
lastname VARCHAR2(40),
email VARCHAR2(300),
dob VARCHAR2(20),
alt_email VARCHAR2(300),
street_address VARCHAR2(50),
address_2 VARCHAR2(50),
city VARCHAR2(30),
state VARCHAR2(30),
zip VARCHAR2(10),
country VARCHAR2(60),
telephone VARCHAR2(10),
CONSTRAINT student_id_pk PRIMARY KEY (id),
CONSTRAINT student_username_uk UNIQUE (username)
);
CREATE TABLE studentsprofilepic (
id NUMBER,
photo_id NUMBER,
photo BLOB,
PRIMARY KEY (photo_id),
FOREIGN KEY (username) REFERENCES students (username)
);
YES, The foreign key column establishes a direct relationship with a primary key or unique key column (referenced key) usually in another table:
CREATE TABLE BOOK(
BNAME VARCHAR2(10)NOT NULL UNIQUE,
BTYPE VARCHAR2(10));
CREATE TABLE BOOKS_AUTH(
A_ID INT NOT NULL,
BNAME_REF VARCHAR2(10) NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (BNAME_REF) REFERENCES BOOK (BNAME));
SQLFIDDLE DEMO
Yes, why not. It is possible to reference a UNIQUE constraint in a FOREIGN KEY.
You could have a Primary key and an Unique key, and you would like to validate both.
Yes, you can reference a column (or columns) governed by either a primary key constraint or a unique constraint.
The problem with your table "studentsprofilepic" is that your foreign key tries to use the column "studentsprofilepic"."username", but that column doesn't exist.
create table studentsprofilepic(
id number,
photo_id number,
photo blob,
-- Add the "username" column.
username varchar2(30) not null,
primary key (photo_id),
foreign key (username) references students (username)
);
Also, ask yourself "What's the point of "studentsprofilepic"."id"?" It's not the primary key. It's not a foreign key. It doesn't seem to serve any purpose besides letting you say, "Hey, my table has a column named 'id'!" That's a questionable feature.
Think about adding more not null constraints.

Oracle foreign key relation

I have a composite primary key in my Candidate table
CREATE TABLE CANDIDATE(
CANDIDATE_ID VARCHAR(5),
NAME VARCHAR(30),
TELEPHONE NUMBER,
PRIMARY KEY(CANDIDATE_ID, NAME));
When I create a child table, I get an error saying the number of referencing columns must match referenced columns when I create a foreign key for the CANDIDATE_ID
CREATE TABLE JOB(
POSITION_ID VARCHAR(5) PRIMARY KEY,
CANDIDATE_ID VARCHAR(5),
DATE2 DATE,
FOREIGN KEY(CANDIDATE_ID) REFERENCES CANDIDATE);
A table can only have one primary key-- you have a composite primary key. If you have a composite primary key, you have to reference the entire key in your child table. That would mean that the child table would need to have a CANDIDATE_ID column and a NAME column.
CREATE TABLE job (
position_id VARCHAR2(5) PRIMARY KEY,
candidate_id VARCHAR2(5),
name VARCHAR2(30),
date2 DATE,
FOREIGN KEY( candidate_id, name ) REFERENCES candidate( candidate_id, name )
);
Of course, you probably don't want to store the name in both tables. You probably want the candidate_id to be the prmiary key of candidate and you may want to create a separate unique constraint on name.
CREATE TABLE CANDIDATE(
CANDIDATE_ID VARCHAR(5) primary key,
NAME VARCHAR(30) unique,
TELEPHONE NUMBER);
CREATE TABLE JOB(
POSITION_ID VARCHAR(5) PRIMARY KEY,
CANDIDATE_ID VARCHAR(5),
DATE2 DATE,
FOREIGN KEY(CANDIDATE_ID) REFERENCES CANDIDATE(candidate_id));
Assuming that the combination of CANDIDATE_ID and NAME is required for the key to be unique, then you will need to add a reference to the NAME column in your referencing table.
I suspect that CANDIDATE_ID is enough to uniquely identify the candidates in your primary table. If that is the case then it should be your primary key and your relationship will work. If you want to index the NAME separately then do so, but leave it out of the primary key.
Last line should be like this;
CONSTRAINT FK_CANDIDATE_ID FOREIGN KEY (CANDIDATE_ID)REFERENCES CANDIDATE(CANDIDATE_ID);
CREATE TABLE dept
( did char(3) not null,
dname varchar2(20) not null,
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (did)
);
strong text
create table emp
(
eid char(3) unique,
ename varchar2(10) not null,
sal number check (sal between 20000 AND 50000),
city varchar2(10) default 'texus',
did char(3) not null,
constraint fk_did_dept
FOREIGN KEY (did) references
dept(did)
);

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