how to change the auto generate id key in sqlserver [duplicate] - asp.net

I have SQL Server database and I want to change the identity column because it started
with a big number 10010 and it's related with another table, now I have 200 records and I want to fix this issue before the records increases.
What's the best way to change or reset this column?

You can not update identity column.
SQL Server does not allow to update the identity column unlike what you can do with other columns with an update statement.
Although there are some alternatives to achieve a similar kind of requirement.
When Identity column value needs to be updated for new records
Use DBCC CHECKIDENT which checks the current identity value for the table and if it's needed, changes the identity value.
DBCC CHECKIDENT('tableName', RESEED, NEW_RESEED_VALUE)
When Identity column value needs to be updated for existing records
Use IDENTITY_INSERT which allows explicit values to be inserted into the identity column of a table.
SET IDENTITY_INSERT YourTable {ON|OFF}
Example:
-- Set Identity insert on so that value can be inserted into this column
SET IDENTITY_INSERT YourTable ON
GO
-- Insert the record which you want to update with new value in the identity column
INSERT INTO YourTable(IdentityCol, otherCol) VALUES(13,'myValue')
GO
-- Delete the old row of which you have inserted a copy (above) (make sure about FK's)
DELETE FROM YourTable WHERE ID=3
GO
--Now set the idenetity_insert OFF to back to the previous track
SET IDENTITY_INSERT YourTable OFF

If got your question right you want to do something like
update table
set identity_column_name = some value
Let me tell you, it is not an easy process and it is not advisable to use it, as there may be some foreign key associated on it.
But here are steps to do it, Please take a back-up of table
Step 1- Select design view of the table
Step 2- Turn off the identity column
Now you can use the update query.
Now redo the step 1 and step 2 and Turn on the identity column
Reference

You need to
set identity_insert YourTable ON
Then delete your row and reinsert it with different identity.
Once you have done the insert don't forget to turn identity_insert off
set identity_insert YourTable OFF

--before running this make sure Foreign key constraints have been removed that reference the ID.
--set table to allow identity to be inserted
SET IDENTITY_INSERT yourTable ON;
GO
--insert everything into a temp table
SELECT *
INTO #tmpYourTable
FROM yourTable
--clear your table
DELETE FROM yourTable
--insert back all the values with the updated ID column
INSERT INTO yourTable (IDCol, OtherCols)
SELECT ID+1 as updatedID --put any other update logic to the ID here
, OtherCols FROM #tmpYourTable
--drop the temp table
DROP TABLE #tmpYourTable
--put identity back to normal
SET IDENTITY_INSERT yourTable OFF;
GO

Try using DBCC CHECKIDENT:
DBCC CHECKIDENT ('YourTable', RESEED, 1);

SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.TableName ON
INSERT INTO dbo.TableName
(
TableId, ColumnName1, ColumnName2, ColumnName3
)
VALUES
(
TableId_Value, ColumnName1_Value, ColumnName2_Value, ColumnName3_Value
)
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.TableName OFF
When using Identity_Insert don't forget to include the column names because sql will not allow you to insert without specifying them

DBCC CHECKIDENT(table_name, RESEED, value)
table_name = give the table you want to reset value
value=initial value to be zero,to start identity column with 1

copy your table to a new table without identity column.
select columns into newtable from yourtable
add an identity column to newtable with new seed and make it as a primary key
ALTER TABLE tableName ADD id MEDIUMINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT KEY

You can also use SET IDENTITY INSERT to allow you to insert values into an identity column.
Example:
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.Tool ON
GO
And then you can insert into an identity column the values you need.

I had similar problem I needed update some IDs what I did was ( i needed to Increase them by 10k ):
set identity_insert YourTable ON
INSERT INTO YourTable
([ID]
,[something1]
,[something2]
,[something3])
SELECT
([ID] + 10000)
,[something1]
,[something2]
,[something3])
FROM YourTable
WHERE something1 = 'needs updeted id'
AND something2 = 'some other condition'
set identity_insert YourTable OFF
DELETE FROM YourTable
WHERE ID >= 'your old ID From'
AND ID <= 'Your old ID To'
And that's it. Hope you understand this logic, in my case there was also PK-FK keys connection with other tables, which meant i had to update them, before i could delete from 'YourTable' original rows.
I know there is already answers to this I just wanted to leave SQL query as example,

ALTER TABLE tablename add newcolumn int
update tablename set newcolumn=existingcolumnname
ALTER TABLE tablename DROP COLUMN existingcolumnname;
EXEC sp_RENAME 'tablename.oldcolumn' , 'newcolumnname', 'COLUMN'
update tablename set newcolumnname=value where condition
However above code works only if there is no primary-foreign key relation

Complete solution for C# programmers using command builder
First of all, you have to know this facts:
In any case, you cannot modify an identity column, so you have to delete the row and re-add with new identity.
You cannot remove the identity property from the column (you would have to remove to column)
The custom command builder from .net always skips the identity column, so you cannot use it for this purpose.
So, once knowing that, what you have to do is. Either program your own SQL Insert statement, or program you own insert command builder. Or use this one that I'be programmed for you. Given a DataTable, generates the SQL Insert script:
public static string BuildInsertSQLText ( DataTable table )
{
StringBuilder sql = new StringBuilder(1000,5000000);
StringBuilder values = new StringBuilder ( "VALUES (" );
bool bFirst = true;
bool bIdentity = false;
string identityType = null;
foreach(DataRow myRow in table.Rows)
{
sql.Append( "\r\nINSERT INTO " + table.TableName + " (" );
foreach ( DataColumn column in table.Columns )
{
if ( column.AutoIncrement )
{
bIdentity = true;
switch ( column.DataType.Name )
{
case "Int16":
identityType = "smallint";
break;
case "SByte":
identityType = "tinyint";
break;
case "Int64":
identityType = "bigint";
break;
case "Decimal":
identityType = "decimal";
break;
default:
identityType = "int";
break;
}
}
else
{
if ( bFirst )
bFirst = false;
else
{
sql.Append ( ", " );
values.Append ( ", " );
}
sql.Append ("[");
sql.Append ( column.ColumnName );
sql.Append ("]");
//values.Append (myRow[column.ColumnName].ToString() );
if (myRow[column.ColumnName].ToString() == "True")
values.Append("1");
else if (myRow[column.ColumnName].ToString() == "False")
values.Append("0");
else if(myRow[column.ColumnName] == System.DBNull.Value)
values.Append ("NULL");
else if(column.DataType.ToString().Equals("System.String"))
{
values.Append("'"+myRow[column.ColumnName].ToString()+"'");
}
else
values.Append (myRow[column.ColumnName].ToString());
//values.Append (column.DataType.ToString() );
}
}
sql.Append ( ") " );
sql.Append ( values.ToString () );
sql.Append ( ")" );
if ( bIdentity )
{
sql.Append ( "; SELECT CAST(scope_identity() AS " );
sql.Append ( identityType );
sql.Append ( ")" );
}
bFirst = true;
sql.Append(";");
values = new StringBuilder ( "VALUES (" );
} //fin foreach
return sql.ToString ();
}

There's a few ways to do this as I've seen., but the best and faster way in my opinion is the following one:
The identity columns have a counter that isn't necessarily the same as the columns registered, you can see the value of this counter with the folowing SQL command:
DBCC CHECKIDENT('tableName', NORESEED);
Then, if you want to edit the identity column you will not be able, but I recommend to make a new register after reseeding the counter to the number you need. To reseed the counter use this command:
DBCC CHECKIDENT('tableName', RESEED, desiredNumber);

I have solved this problem firstly using DBCC and then using insert. For example if your table is
Firstly set new current ID Value on the table as NEW_RESEED_VALUE
MyTable {
IDCol,
colA,
colB
}
DBCC CHECKIDENT('MyTable', RESEED, NEW_RESEED_VALUE)
then you can use
insert into MyTable (colA, ColB) select colA, colB from MyTable
This would duplicate all your records but using new IDCol value starting as NEW_RESEED_VALUE. You can then remove higher ID Value duplicate rows once your have removed/moved their foreign key references, if any.

You can create a new table using the following code.
SELECT IDENTITY (int, 1, 1) AS id, column1, column2
INTO dbo.NewTable
FROM dbo.OldTable
Then delete the old db, and rename the new db to the old db's name. Note: that column1 and column2 represent all the columns in your old table that you want to keep in your new table.

I did the following:
MOVE related data into temporary storage
UPDATE primary key/identity column value (dropping and creating constraints)
RE-INSERT related data with new foreign key value
I wrapped my solution in a STORED PROCEDURE:
CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[UpdateCustomerLocationId]
#oldCustomerLocationId INT,
#newCustomerLocationId INT
AS
/*
Updates CustomerLocation.CustomerLocationId #oldCustomerLocationId to #newCustomerLocationId
Example:
EXEC [dbo].[UpdateCustomerLocationId]
#oldCustomerLocationId = 6154874,
#newCustomerLocationId = 50334;
*/
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
-- exit if #oldCustomerLocationId does not exists
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM dbo.CustomerLocation cl WHERE cl.CustomerLocationId = #oldCustomerLocationId)
BEGIN
PRINT CONCAT('CustomerLocationId ''', #oldCustomerLocationId, ''' (#oldCustomerLocationId) does not exist in dbo.CustomerLocation');
RETURN 1; -- 0 = success, > 0 = failure
END
-- exit if #newCustomerLocationId already exists
IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM dbo.CustomerLocation cl WHERE cl.CustomerLocationId = #newCustomerLocationId)
BEGIN
PRINT CONCAT('CustomerLocationId ''', #newCustomerLocationId, ''' (#newCustomerLocationId) already exists in dbo.CustomerLocation');
RETURN 2; -- 0 = success, > 0 = failure
END
BEGIN TRAN;
BEGIN -- MOVE related data into temporary storage
IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM dbo.CustomerLocationData t WHERE t.CustomerLocationId = #oldCustomerLocationId) BEGIN
IF OBJECT_ID('tempdb..#CustomerLocationData') IS NOT NULL
DROP TABLE #CustomerLocationData;
SELECT * INTO #CustomerLocationData FROM dbo.CustomerLocationData t WHERE t.CustomerLocationId = #oldCustomerLocationId;
DELETE t FROM dbo.CustomerLocationData t WHERE t.CustomerLocationId = #oldCustomerLocationId;
END
END
BEGIN -- UPDATE dbo.CustomerLocation
-- DROP CONSTRAINTs
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[CustomerLocation] DROP CONSTRAINT [UC_CustomerLocation];
-- INSERT OLD record with new CustomerLocationId
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.CustomerLocation ON;
INSERT INTO dbo.CustomerLocation
(
CustomerLocationId, CustomerId, LocationId, CustomerLocationIdent, CustomerLocationIdent2, LocationIdent, LocationName, CustomerDistrictId,
CustomerLocationGUID, UpdatedOn, IssueManager, EnrollSelfMonitoring, TemperatureControlDeadlineHour, CreatedOn, OperationBegin, ActiveCustomer,
Comments, LocationName2, ParentGroup, TempString1, TempString2, TempString3, TempString4, TempString5, AutoInheritFromLocation, ClassificationPrimary
)
SELECT #newCustomerLocationId AS CustomerLocationId, CustomerId,LocationId, CustomerLocationIdent, CustomerLocationIdent2, LocationIdent, LocationName, CustomerDistrictId,
CustomerLocationGUID, UpdatedOn, IssueManager, EnrollSelfMonitoring, TemperatureControlDeadlineHour, CreatedOn, OperationBegin, ActiveCustomer,
Comments,LocationName2, ParentGroup, TempString1, TempString2, TempString3, TempString4, TempString5, AutoInheritFromLocation, ClassificationPrimary
FROM dbo.CustomerLocation
WHERE CustomerLocationId = #oldCustomerLocationId;
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.CustomerLocation OFF;
-- DELETE OLD record
DELETE cl FROM dbo.CustomerLocation cl WHERE cl.CustomerLocationId = #oldCustomerLocationId;
-- ADD CONSTRAINTS
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[CustomerLocation] ADD CONSTRAINT [UC_CustomerLocation] UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED ([CustomerId], [LocationId]);
END
BEGIN -- re-INSERT related data from temporary storage
IF OBJECT_ID('tempdb..#CustomerLocationData') IS NOT NULL BEGIN
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.CustomerLocationData ON;
INSERT INTO dbo.CustomerLocationData (Guid, CustomerLocationId, CustomerLocationDataTypeId, Date, Category, Data)
SELECT Guid, #newCustomerLocationId CustomerLocationId, CustomerLocationDataTypeId, Date, Category, Data FROM #CustomerLocationData;
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.CustomerLocationData OFF;
END
END
COMMIT TRAN;
END

This happened to me because I did a merge that was updating the ID that I was doing the Merge on.
Example that did not work (note ClownID):
MERGE ArchitectMain.dbo.BackendClowns AS TGT
USING (
SELECT ClownID
,ClownName
,Description
,Active
,EmailSubject
,AddedBy
,Added
FROM #temptable1
) AS SRC(ClownID, ClownName, Description, Active, EmailSubject, AddedBy, Added)
ON (TGT.ClownID = SRC.ClownID)
WHEN MATCHED
THEN
UPDATE
SET ClownID = SRC.ClownID
,ClownName = SRC.ClownName
,Description = SRC.Description
,Active = SRC.Active
,EmailSubject = SRC.EmailSubject
,AddedBy = SRC.AddedBy
,Added = SRC.Added;
Example that worked (note ClownID):
MERGE ArchitectMain.dbo.BackendClowns AS TGT
USING (
SELECT ClownID
,ClownName
,Description
,Active
,EmailSubject
,AddedBy
,Added
FROM #temptable1
) AS SRC(ClownID, ClownName, Description, Active, EmailSubject, AddedBy, Added)
ON (TGT.ClownID = SRC.ClownID)
WHEN MATCHED
THEN
UPDATE
SET ClownName = SRC.ClownName
,Description = SRC.Description
,Active = SRC.Active
,EmailSubject = SRC.EmailSubject
,AddedBy = SRC.AddedBy
,Added = SRC.Added;

Update is not allowed:
but you can
INSERT new data with correct key
Delete reg
import: all fields must be declared in insert into
sample: reg 5 must be changed to 4:
set IDENTITY_INSERT Gastos_ReclamacionCausa on
insert into Gastos_ReclamacionCausa
(IDCausa,TextoCombo,Asunto,Mensaje,EsBaja)
select 4,TextoCombo,Asunto,Mensaje,EsBaja from Gastos_ReclamacionCausa where idcausa=5
delete from Gastos_ReclamacionCausa where idcausa = 5
set IDENTITY_INSERT Gastos_ReclamacionCausa off

If you specifically need to change the primary key value to a different number (ex 123 -> 1123). The identity property blocks changing a PK value. Set Identity_insert isn't going to work. Doing an Insert/Delete is not advisable if you have cascading deletes (unless you turn off referential integrity checking).
EDIT: Newer versions of SQL don't allow changing the syscolumns entity, so part of my solution has to be done the hard way. Refer to this SO on how to remove Identity from a primary key instead:
Remove Identity from a column in a table
This script will turn off identity on a PK:
***********************
sp_configure 'allow update', 1
go
reconfigure with override
go
update syscolumns set colstat = 0 --turn off bit 1 which indicates identity column
where id = object_id('table_name') and name = 'column_name'
go
exec sp_configure 'allow update', 0
go
reconfigure with override
go
***********************
Next, you can set the relationships so they'll update the foreign key references. Or else you need to turn off relationship enforcement. This SO link shows how:
How can foreign key constraints be temporarily disabled using T-SQL?
Now, you can do your updates. I wrote a short script to write all my update SQL based on the same column name (in my case, I needed to increase the CaseID by 1,000,000:
select
'update ['+c.table_name+'] SET ['+Column_Name+']=['+Column_Name+']+1000000'
from Information_Schema.Columns as c
JOIN Information_Schema.Tables as t ON t.table_Name=c.table_name and t.Table_Schema=c.table_schema and t.table_type='BASE TABLE'
where Column_Name like 'CaseID' order by Ordinal_position
Lastly, re-enable referential integrity and then re-enable the Identity column on the primary key.
Note: I see some folks on these questions ask WHY. In my case, I have to merge data from a second production instance into a master DB so I can shut down the second instance. I just need all the PK/FKs of operations data to not collide. Meta-data FKs are identical.

Related

Oracle 11g Triggers

I have create a table person(id, name ,samenamecount).The samenamecount attribute can be null but for each row can store the row count for same names.I am achieving this by calling a stored procedure inside a after insert trigger.Below is my code.
create or replace procedure automatic(s in person.name%type)
AS
BEGIN
update person set samenamecount=(select count(*) from person where name=s) where name=s;
END;
create or replace trigger inserttrigger
after insert
on person
for each row
declare
begin
automatic(:new.name);
end;
On inserting a row it is giving error like
table ABCD.PERSON is mutating, trigger/function may not see it.
Can somebody help me to figure out this?
If you have the table:
CREATE TABLE person (
id NUMBER
GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY
CONSTRAINT person__id__pk PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR2(20)
NOT NULL
);
Then rather than creating a trigger, instead, you could use a view:
CREATE VIEW person_view (
id,
name,
samenamecount
) AS
SELECT id,
name,
COUNT(*) OVER (PARTITION BY name)
FROM person;
You can use the trigger:
CREATE TRIGGER inserttrigger
AFTER INSERT ON person
BEGIN
MERGE INTO person dst
USING (
SELECT ROWID AS rid,
COUNT(*) OVER (PARTITION BY name) AS cnt
FROM person
) src
ON (src.rid = dst.ROWID)
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET samenamecount = src.cnt;
END;
/
fiddle
If you want to make it more efficient then you could use a compound trigger and collate the names that are being inserted and only update the matching rows.

trigger to delete a record before insert

i have a table with 4 columns
1.msisdn
2.accountnumber
3.cardnumber
4.subscriptiondate
I want to add a trigger to this table. If the data i am inserting is
1.99999999
2.2
3.3298572857239
4.(this can be blank)
and the data that is currently in the table is
1.99999999
2.1
3.3298572857239
4.(this can be blank)
Trigger should check if there is this msisdn 99999999 is already having a record with this cardnumber 3298572857239. If there is a record already existing in the table, the trigger should delete the existing entry and insert the new one. The final result should look like this
1.99999999
2.1
3.3298572857239
4.(this can be blank)
I want to keep the value of accountnumber same before and after the trigger. This is what i have tried so far but for this trigger, i am not getting any data in accountnumber column. Please someone help
DROP TRIGGER TRIG_TABLEA;
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TRIG_TABLEA
BEFORE INSERT ON TABLEA
REFERENCING OLD AS Old NEW AS New
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.accountnumber := :old.accountnumber;
DELETE FROM TABLEA WHERE MSISDN = :new.MSISDN AND CARDNUMBER = :new.CARDNUMBER;
:new.MSISDN := :new.MSISDN;
:new.CARDNUMBER := :new.CARDNUMBER;
:new.accountnumber := :old.accountnumber;
END;
/
Don't do a delete-and-insert. You want MERGE. The only thing that can change in your statement is accountnumber and subscriptiondate. You don't say where the data is coming from, so I assume this is a PL/SQL procedure with p_* as the parameters. So you want something like this:
MERGE INTO mytable trg
USING ( SELECT p_accountnumber, p_subscriptiondate FROM dual ) src
ON ( trg.msisdn = p_msisdn AND trg.cardnumber )
WHEN NOT MATCHED INSERT ( msisdn, accountnumber, cardnumber, subscriptiondate )
VALUES ( p_msisdn, p_accountnumber, p_cardnumber, p_subscriptiondate )
WHEN MATCHED SET ( cardnumber = p_cardnumber, subscriptiondate = p_subscriptiondate)
This will do an insert if the row doesn't exist or update an existing row if it does.

Incorrect default value passed to the SQL Server database

I have set my column to int not null default 1... but whenever I save my record, it sets default value for that record to be 0.
I am not setting it anywhere. I don't know where I am making a mistake.
I have debugged my code , and when I am passing new entity object it is setting default value for not null to 0 .May be it is something with LINQ, But I don't know how to handle it.I don't want to explicitly assign value.
Thanks!
For sql-server, you can use SQL Server Profiler to catch all the scripts you run into the DB.
This may show you some details
Try running this query, replacing the 'myTable' and 'myColumn' values with your actual TABLE and COLUMN names, and see what's returned:
SELECT
OBJECT_NAME(C.object_id) AS [Table Name]
,C.Name AS [Column Name]
,DC.Name AS [Constraint Name]
,DC.Type_Desc AS [Constraint Type]
,DC.Definition AS [Default Value]
FROM sys.default_constraints DC
INNER JOIN sys.Columns C
ON DC.parent_column_id = C.column_id
AND DC.parent_object_id = C.object_id
WHERE OBJECT_NAME(DC.parent_object_id) = 'myTable'
AND COL_NAME(DC.parent_object_id,DC.parent_column_id) = 'myColumn'
;
Should return something like this:
[Table Name] [Column Name] [Constraint Name] [Constraint Type] [Default Value]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
myTable myColumn DF_myTable_myColumn DEFAULT_CONSTRAINT ('0')
If the [Default Value] returned is indeed (1), then it means that you have set the constraint properly and something else is at play here. It might be a trigger, or some other automated DML that you've forgotten/didn't know about, or something else entirely.
I am not the world's biggest fan of using a TRIGGER, but in a case like this, it could be handy. I find that one of the best uses for a TRIGGER is debugging little stuff like this - because it lets you see what values are being passed into a table without having to scroll through mountains of profiler data. You could try something like this (again, switching out the myTable and myColumn values with your actual table and column names):
CREATE TABLE Default_Check
(
Action_Time DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT GETDATE()
,Inserted_Value INT
);
CREATE TRIGGER Checking_Default ON myTable
AFTER INSERT, UPDATE
AS
BEGIN
INSERT INTO Default_Check (Inserted_Value)
SELECT I.myColumn
FROM Inserted I
;
END
;
This trigger would simply list the date/time of an update/insert done against your table, as well as the inserted value. After creating this, you could run a single INSERT statement, then check:
SELECT * FROM Default_Check;
If you see one row, only one action (insert/update) was done against the table. If you see two, something you don't expect is happening - you can check to see what. You will also see here when the 0 was inserted/updated.
When you're done, just make sure you DROP the trigger:
DROP TRIGGER Checking_Default;
You'll want to DROP the table, too, once it's become irrelevant:
DROP TABLE Default_Check;
If all of this still didn't help you, let me know.
In VB use
Property VariableName As Integer? = Nothing
And
In C# use
int? value = 0;
if (value == 0)
{
value = null;
}
Please check My Example:
create table emp ( ids int null, [DOJ] datetime NOT null)
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Emp] ADD CONSTRAINT DF_Emp_DOJ DEFAULT (GETDATE()) FOR [DOJ]
1--Not working for Default Values
insert into emp
select '1',''
2 ---working for Default Values
insert into emp(ids) Values(13)
select * From emp

How to autogenerate the username with specific string?

I am using asp.net2008 and MY SQL.
I want to auto-generate the value for the field username with the format as
"SISI001", "SISI002",
etc. in SQL whenever the new record is going to inserted.
How can i do it?
What can be the SQL query ?
Thanks.
Add a column with auto increment integer data type
Then get the maximum value of that column in the table using "Max()" function and assign the value to a integer variable (let the variable be 'x').
After that
string userid = "SISI";
x=x+1;
string count = new string('0',6-x.ToString().length);
userid=userid+count+x.ToString();
Use userid as your username
Hope It Helps. Good Luck.
PLAN A>
You need to keep a table (keys) that contains the last numeric ID generated for various entities. This case the entity is "user". So the table will contain two cols viz. entity varchar(100) and lastid int.
You can then have a function written that will receive the entity name and return the incremented ID. Use this ID concatenated with the string component "SISI" to be passed to MySQL for insertion to the database.
Following is the MySQL Table tblkeys:
CREATE TABLE `tblkeys` (
`entity` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`lastid` int(11) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`entity`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
The MySQL Function:
DELIMITER $$
CREATE FUNCTION `getkey`( ps_entity VARCHAR(100)) RETURNS INT(11)
BEGIN
DECLARE ll_lastid INT;
UPDATE tblkeys SET lastid = lastid+1 WHERE tblkeys.entity = ps_entity;
SELECT tblkeys.lastid INTO ll_lastid FROM tblkeys WHERE tblkeys.entity = ps_entity;
RETURN ll_lastid;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
The sample function call:
SELECT getkey('user')
Sample Insert command:
insert into users(username, password) values ('SISI'+getkey('user'), '$password')
Plan B>
This way the ID will be a bit larger but will not require any extra table. Use the following SQL to get a new unique ID:
SELECT ROUND(NOW() + 0)
You can pass it as part of the insert command and concatenate it with the string component of "SISI".
I am not an asp.net developer but i can help you
You can do something like this...
create a sequence in your mysql database as-
CREATE SEQUENCE "Database_name"."SEQUENCE1" MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 9999999999999999999999999999 INCREMENT BY 001 START WITH 21 CACHE 20 NOORDER NOCYCLE ;
and then while inserting use this query-----
insert into testing (userName) values(concat('SISI', sequence1.nextval))
may it help you in your doubt...
Try this:
CREATE TABLE Users (
IDs int NOT NULL IDENTITY (1, 1),
USERNAME AS 'SISI' + RIGHT('000000000' + CAST(IDs as varchar(10)), 4), --//getting uniqueness of IDs field
Address varchar(150)
)
(not tested)

How to generate a column with id which increments on every insert

This is my table where i want my PNRNo to be generated as 'PNRRES001' for the first entry, and consecutive entries with 'PNRRES002','PNRRES002' so on.
So while creating table only i called that column to function which will generate the PNR no, User just has to enter the CustomerNo from the front end, and data wit PNR & Customer No will updated to the PNRDetails table.
CREATE TABLE PNRDetails(PNRNo AS (DBO.FuncIncPNR()) ,customerNo INT
--FUNCTION TO GENERATE THE PNR NUMBER
ALTER FUNCTION dbo.FuncIncPNR()
RETURNS VARCHAR(20)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #RR VARCHAR(20) SET #RR='PNRRESA001'
--here i have checked if no value is there then return the first value as 'PNRRESA001'
IF((SELECT COUNT(*)FROM PNRDetails)=0)
BEGIN
RETURN #RR
END
ELSE
-- if any value is there then take the last value and add 1 to it and update to the table
BEGIN
DECLARE #pnr VARCHAR(20),#S1 VARCHAR(20),#S2 INT
DECLARE PNRCursor CURSOR Static
FOR SELECT PNRNo FROM PNRDetails
OPEN PNRCursor
FETCH LAST FROM PNRNo INTO #pnr
SET #S1=SUBSTRING(#pnr,1,7)
SET #S2=RIGHT(#PNR,3)
SET #S2=#S2+1;
SET #pnr=#S1+#S2;
END
RETURN #pnr
END
--Here am inserting only customerNo as 5 and the PNR should be generated by my function
INSERT INTO PNRDetails VALUES(5)
--it shows 1 row updated :)
SELECT * FROM PNRDetails
-- but when i run select command it shows
--Maximum stored procedure, function, trigger, or view nesting level exceeded (limit 32). :(
U can run this.And pls do help if u find anything that could help me. any help will be appreciated...
Waiting for your kind response...
You could try to use a computed column and an identity column instead.
create table PNRDetails
(
ID int identity,
PNRNo as 'PNRRES'+right(1000+ID, 3),
customerNo int
)
I would suggest just using an IDENTITY instead as your id, let SQL Server handle the assignment of each id number with all it's built-in guards for concurrency, and leave the formatting up to the UI....or, create a computed column that defines the formatted version of the ID if you really do need it in the DB.
The risk you run with your intended approach is:
poor performance
concurrency issues - if loats of ids are being generate around the same time
If you are happy to change the table structure. Following will do the job.
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[PNRDetails](
[autoId] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[prnNo] AS ('PNRRES'+right('000'+CONVERT([varchar](3),[dbo].[GetRowCount]([autoId]),(0)),(3))),
[customerNo] [int] NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_Table1] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[autoId] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]
EDIT: to address identity issue for your requirement pls create following function and pass the [autoId] in as above (edited) in the computed column.
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.GetRowCount
(
#autoId INT
)
RETURNS INT
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #RESULTS AS INT
SELECT #RESULTS = COUNT(autoId) FROM PNRDetails WHERE PNRDetails.autoId<#autoId
RETURN #RESULTS + 1
END
GO
--INSERT
INSERT INTO PNRDetails (customerNo) VALUES(5)
1) You can use an identity column in your database (INTEGER)
PROS: easy/No gaps in between generated ids
CONS: You have to select the inserted id & return via procedure/query
if you were to show it to end user
2) Define a database sequence
PROS: easy to implement/Can be stored/shown to user before the form is
even saved
CONS: Gaps in between if the certain id is once generated & not used
3). Select max(id) from column + 1
PROS: Useful where only single user inserts in a table
CONS: disastrous if you were in an environment where multiple users
were inserting in the same tablle (mismatched max ids)
4) Use a database trigger to autoincrement the column
PROS:automated
CONS: hard to debug (you have to make sure it don't breaks for some
reason otherwise insert fails)
Change the way your trigger works. Something like this
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.fn_FuncIncPNR(#ID int)
RETURNS varchar(20)
BEGIN
Declare #Retval varchar(20),
#No varchar(4)
Select #No = convert(varchar(4), #ID)
while Len(#No) < 4
Select #No = '0' + #No
Select #Retval = 'PNRRESA' + #No
RETURN #Retval
END
You will notice there is a parameter field
Change your table create to this
CREATE TABLE PNRDetails(PNRNo AS (dbo.fn_ShowPNRNo(wID)), wID int IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL, customerNo INT)
That should solve your problem

Resources