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Indexes and more Table Creation Indexes • Increase database performance • must be explicitly defined • once defined, are transparent to the user • once created, the system maintains it • more than one can exist on a given table Creating an Index • Syntax CREATE [UNIQUE] INDEX index_name ON table_name (column_name) • Example create index auind on authors (au_id) Composite Index •Used when columns have a logical relationship and would be searched as a unit •Example create index au_name_ind on authors (au_lname, au_fname) •order not important, but performance is better when primary search col is first 2 Kinds of Indexes • Unique Index • Clustered Index Unique Index • No 2 rows are permitted to have the same value • system checks data upon creation and data addition • rejects duplicates and returns an error • should only be created on a column that requires uniqueness eg. ssn, acct code • can be created as a composite or single column • helps in maintaining data integrity • boosts search performance Clustered Index •System sorts rows on an ongoing basis so that the physical order is the same as the indexed order •only 1 can exist per table •should only be created for a column that is most often retrieved in order •greatly increases performance when searching for contiguous key values… especially a range •slows down data updates due to the sorting involved Things to Consider • Indexes greatly increase query response time • every index requires system resources to store and maintain • indexes can actually slow down the performance of UPDATES, INSERTS, and DELETES due to index maintenance So… don’t over index What Should We Index? • Any column frequently used in retrieval • primary key columns • columns that are often queried in a sorted order • columns that are used in joins • columns that are often searched for ranges We Should NOT Index… • Columns rarely used in queries • columns with 2 or 3 possible values eg. Male or Female • small tables SQL-92 Create Table Constraints • PRIMARY KEY – rejects duplicates and nulls • UNIQUE – rejects duplicates, allows nulls • DEFAULT – inserts the default value when no value is entered • CHECK – validates data format • FOREIGN KEY and REFERENCES – ties foreign key to the primary key it references Put it on paper! Column Datatype Null? Key title_id title char(6) varchar(80) not null not null primary, unique unique type pub_id price advance char(12) char(4) money money Default Reference 2 letter then 2 dig unclass null null Check business, mod_cook, trad_cook publishers, pub_id Then write your SQL create table title (title_id char(6) not null constraint tididx primary key constraint tidcheck check (title_id like ‘[A-Z] [A-Z] [0-9] [0-9]…’), title varchar(80) not null constraint titleidx unique, type char(12) default ‘unclassified’ null constraint typechk check (type in(‘business’, ‘mod_cook’, ‘trad_cook’)), pub_id char(4) null reference publishers (pub_id), price money null, advance money null) Changing a Table • Syntax – ALTER table table_name add column_name datatype null|not null Removing Objects • Database – DROP DATABASE db_name – deletes ALL tables and data within it!! • Table – DROP TABLE table_name – deletes table and its contents • Index – DROP INDEX table_name.index_name – deletes named index on named table Joins • • • • What columns do I need? What tables have these columns? Are all the tables related in some way? If not, are there other tables that can relate them? • How are they all related? • Link them together by setting their common fields equal in the WHERE clause. • Restrict the WHERE clause to the record(s) of interest. 2 ways of looking at a Join • Looking at all the tables, linking them together and treating them like one big table. • Setting the main search criteria and then linking the common fields to the data that is of interest.