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I often specify my @Column annotations like this:

@Column(columnDefinition="character varying (100) not null",length=100,nullable=false)

As you can see I specify length and nullable even though the columnDefinition already specifies those. That's because I don't know where/when these values are used exactly.

So, when specifying columnDefinition, what other properties of @Column are made redundant?

If it matters, I use Hibernate and PostgreSQL

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  • if you are going to specify it the exact column will be created in your database otherwise it will be created as default as per database Jul 4, 2013 at 12:40
  • 3
    I should add that I no longer use this property at all, and prefer to do my own DDL. Apr 8, 2015 at 12:48

2 Answers 2

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My Answer: All of the following should be overridden (i.e. describe them all within columndefinition, if appropriate):

  • length
  • precision
  • scale
  • nullable
  • unique

i.e. the column DDL will consist of: name + columndefinition and nothing else.

Rationale follows.


  1. Annotation containing the word "Column" or "Table" is purely physical - properties only used to control DDL/DML against database.

  2. Other annotation purely logical - properties used in-memory in java to control JPA processing.

  3. That's why sometimes it appears the optionality/nullability is set twice - once via @Basic(...,optional=true) and once via @Column(...,nullable=true). Former says attribute/association can be null in the JPA object model (in-memory), at flush time; latter says DB column can be null. Usually you'd want them set the same - but not always, depending on how the DB tables are setup and reused.

In your example, length and nullable properties are overridden and redundant.


So, when specifying columnDefinition, what other properties of @Column are made redundant?

  1. In JPA Spec & javadoc:

    • columnDefinition definition: The SQL fragment that is used when generating the DDL for the column.

    • columnDefinition default: Generated SQL to create a column of the inferred type.

    • The following examples are provided:

      @Column(name="DESC", columnDefinition="CLOB NOT NULL", table="EMP_DETAIL")
      @Column(name="EMP_PIC", columnDefinition="BLOB NOT NULL")
      
    • And, err..., that's it really. :-$ ?!

    Does columnDefinition override other properties provided in the same annotation?

    The javadoc and JPA spec don't explicity address this - spec's not giving great protection. To be 100% sure, test with your chosen implementation.

  2. The following can be safely implied from examples provided in the JPA spec

    • name & table can be used in conjunction with columnDefinition, neither are overridden
    • nullable is overridden/made redundant by columnDefinition
  3. The following can be fairly safely implied from the "logic of the situation" (did I just say that?? :-P ):

    • length, precision, scale are overridden/made redundant by the columnDefinition - they are integral to the type
    • insertable and updateable are provided separately and never included in columnDefinition, because they control SQL generation in-memory, before it is emmitted to the database.
  4. That leaves just the "unique" property. It's similar to nullable - extends/qualifies the type definition, so should be treated integral to type definition. i.e. should be overridden.


Test My Answer For columns "A" & "B", respectively:

  @Column(name="...", table="...", insertable=true, updateable=false,
          columndefinition="NUMBER(5,2) NOT NULL UNIQUE"

  @Column(name="...", table="...", insertable=false, updateable=true,
          columndefinition="NVARCHAR2(100) NULL"
  • confirm generated table has correct type/nullability/uniqueness
  • optionally, do JPA insert & update: former should include column A, latter column B
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  • Does this annotation work when the column already exists in the DB with varchar(100) and I want to make it as varchar(255) ?
    – Vignesh_A
    Mar 5, 2020 at 13:03
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columnDefinition will override the sql DDL generated by hibernate for this particular column, it is non portable and depends on what database you are using. You can use it to specify nullable, length, precision, scale... ect.

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  • 1
    I know what it does, and that it's not portable, but is the DDL generation the only place where the other properties (length, nullable, etc.) are normally used? Jul 4, 2013 at 15:33
  • 2
    According to the source code of javax.persistence.Column, properties: unique, nullable, columnDefinition, length, precision, scale are only used to DDL generation, properties: name, table are used to specify column mapping, and properties: insertable, updatable are used to specify whether the column is included in SQL INSERT/UPDATE statements generated by the persistence provider.
    – Septem
    Jul 4, 2013 at 22:47

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