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Is there a way with MySQL (5.0 specifically) to have an auto_increment field who's value is based on a grouping column?

Example:

id  name   group_field
1   test   1
2   test2  1
1   test3  2
2   test4  2
1   test5  3
2   test6  3

I'd like to not have to go through any 'crazy' methods to achive this, but will if necessary.

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3 Answers

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For MyISAM and BDB tables you can have an auto_increment field as a secondary part of key, e.g.

CREATE TABLE foo (
   id          INT AUTO_INCREMENT NOT NULL,
   group_field INT NOT NULL,
   name        VARCHAR(128),

   PRIMARY KEY(group_field, id)
);

Here's what the manual says about this

In this case, the generated value for the AUTO_INCREMENT column is calculated as MAX(auto_increment_column) + 1 WHERE prefix=given-prefix. This is useful when you want to put data into ordered groups.

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does this work with innodb tables as well? – gms8994 Mar 24 at 14:12
As the manual only mentions MyISAM and BDB, I would guess not. See also dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/… – Paul Dixon Mar 24 at 14:15
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Have you thought about composite primary keys?

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You can achieve that with trigger on insert, setting max(id) from table group by group_field having group_fileld = @inserted_group;

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