Computer Science, asked by Abdul6381, 10 months ago

.Create a table called Students which has 5 fields and 4 records. Mention the data type of each field, identify the primary key, candidate key and alternate key from the above table

Answers

Answered by surendardun30
2

Explanation:

We know that database uses tables to organize information. To maintain data integrity (that is data should be correct and in well formed) we use concept of keys. There are five types of keys in database which is as follows -

Candidate key

Primary Key

Foreign Key

Alternate Key

Composite Key

Example:

STUDENT {SID, FNAME, LNAME, COURSEID}

Here in STUDENT table keys are:

Candidate keys are SID or FNAME+LAME

Primary Key: SID

Foreign Key: COURSEID

Alternate Key: FNAME+LAME

Composite Key: FNAME+LAME

Candidate Key

Candidate keys are those keys which is candidate for primary key of a table. In simple words we can understand that such type of keys which full fill all the requirements of primary key which is not null and have unique records is a candidate for primary key. So thus type of key is known as candidate key. Every table must have at least one candidate key but at the same time can have several.

Primary Key

Such type of candidate key which is chosen as a primary key for table is known as primary key. Primary keys are used to identify tables. There is only one primary key per table. In SQL Server when we create primary key to any table then a clustered index is automatically created to that column.

Foreign Key

Foreign key are those keys which is used to define relationship between two tables. When we want to implement relationship between two tables then we use concept of foreign key. It is also known as referential integrity. We can create more than one foreign key per table. foreign key is generally a primary key from one table that appears as a field in another where the first table has a relationship to the second. In other words, if we had a table A with a primary key X that linked to a table B where X was a field in B, then X would be a foreign key in B.

Alternate Key

If any table have more than one candidate key, then after choosing primary key from those candidate key, rest of candidate keys are known as an alternate key of that table. Like here we can take a very simple example to understand the concept of alternate key. Suppose we have a table named Employee which has two columns EmpID and EmpMail, both have not null attributes and unique value. So both columns are treated as candidate key. Now we make EmpID as a primary key to that table then EmpMail is known as alternate key.

Composite Key

When we create keys on more than one column then that key is known as composite key. Like here we can take an example to understand this feature. I have a table Student which has two columns Sid and SrefNo and we make primary key on these two column. Then this key is known as composite key.

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