SQL (Structured Query Language)


SQL Naming Conventions
A naming convention is a set of unwritten rules that you should use if you want to increase the readability of the whole data model:
CREATE TABLE
CREATE TABLE table-name (
  column-name-1 type [NOT NULL | UNIQUE] [, column-name-2 ... ]
  ...
  [, UNIQUE ( list-of-column-names ) [, UNIQUE ... ] ]
  [, PRIMARY KEY ( list-of-column-names ) ]
  [, FOREIGN KEY ( list-of-column-names )
      REFERENCES  table-name-2 [ ( list-of-column-names ) ]
  [, FOREIGN KEY ... ] ]
  [, CHECK ( condition ) [, CHECK ... ] ] )
  • Key (PRIMARY KEY) means an attribute or attribute combination whose values uniquely identify the tuples of any relation.

  • Foreign key (FOREIGN KEY) defined for a schema R, however, describes an attribute or attribute combination which is a key in another schema S (REFERENCES); the meaning of a foreign key relationship between R and S via attribute X is that the X part of R is a subset of the X part of S.

SQL> DROP TABLE  student;
SQL> CREATE TABLE  student (
  2    student_id   CHAR(4) PRIMARY KEY,
  3    last_name    VARCHAR(32),
  4    first_name   VARCHAR(32),
  5    class        INTEGER,
  6    phone        VARCHAR(16) );




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