0

My insert statements are:

create table department (
    name varchar (30) primary key
);
create table PIO (id varchar (5), name varchar (30), dept_name varchar (30), email_id varchar (30),
    primary key ( id, name),
    foreign key(dept_name) references department (name) on delete cascade);

create table applicant (
   name varchar(30), email_id varchar (30), phone varchar (15), address text
    );
create table application (app_name varchar (30), app_id int, pio_id varchar (5), pio_name varchar (30), dat DATE,content text,
    primary key (app_name,app_id,pio_id,pio_name),
    foreign key (app_name) references applicant (name),
    foreign key (pio_id) references  PIO (id),
    foreign key (pio_name) references PIO (name)
    );

The last(application) table doesn't get created....it gives the following error:

Supports transactions, row-level locking, and foreign keys errorno 150

0

1 Answer 1

1

PIO (id) and (name) are not keys, so you cannot declare foreign keys to them in application. You probably mean instead of those two FKs to have one:

--in application
foreign key (pio_id,pio_name) references PIO (id,name)

This forces every particular (pio_id,pio_name) pair in PIO to appear as an (id,name) pair in application.

It is possible that you just want (pio_id)s to appear as (id)s and (io_name)s to appear as (name)s. That is two "inclusion dependency" (IND) constraints. A FK constraint is an IND constraint referencing a PK or UNIQUE subrow. It is hard to code a non-FK IND constraint in SQL.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.