Sybase 12.4.2 사용자 설명서

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CHAPTER 7    Ensuring Data Integrity
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It is up to the application programmer to decide how to present this information 
to the user and enable the user to take appropriate action. The appropriate 
action in this case is usually just to provide a unique value for the primary key.
Primary keys enforce entity integrity
Once the primary key for each table is specified, no further action is needed by 
client application developers or by the database administrator to maintain 
entity integrity, if it is a single-column primary key.
For a multi-column primary key, you can create a stored procedure to check 
insertions into all primary key columns, so that the combined columns would 
always produce a unique value.
The primary key for a table is defined by the table owner when the table is 
created. If the structure of a table is modified at a later date, the primary key 
may also be redefined using the ALTER TABLE statement clauses DELETE 
PRIMARY KEY or ADD PRIMARY KEY. For details, see the ALTER 
TABLE statement in Adaptive Server IQ Reference Manual.
Some application development systems and database design tools allow you to 
create and alter database tables. If you are using such a system, you may not 
have to enter the CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE command explicitly: 
the application generates the statement itself from the information you provide.
For information on creating primary keys, see “Creating primary and foreign 
keys”. For the detailed syntax of the CREATE TABLE statement, see 
“CREATE TABLE statement;” for information about changing table structure, 
see the “ALTER TABLE statement,” both in the Adaptive Server IQ 
Reference.
Declaring referential integrity
A foreign key relates the information in one table (the 
foreign
 table) to 
information in another (
referenced
 or 
primary
) table. A particular column, or 
combination of columns, in a foreign table is designated as a foreign key to the 
primary table.
For the foreign key relationship to be valid, the entries in the foreign key must 
correspond to the primary key values of a row in the referenced table. 
Occasionally, some other unique column combination may be referenced, 
instead of a primary key.