I have inserted a row with some data in a table where a primary key is present. How would one "SELECT" the primary key of the row one just inserted?
I should have been more specific and mentioned that I'm currently using SQLite.
I have inserted a row with some data in a table where a primary key is present. How would one "SELECT" the primary key of the row one just inserted?
I should have been more specific and mentioned that I'm currently using SQLite.
For MS SQL Server:
SCOPE_IDENTITY()
will return you the last generated identity value within your current scope:
SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY() AS NewID
INT IDENTITY
(or BIGINT IDENTITY
) - any other type of PK (like a GUID or something else) is not supported by SCOPE_IDENTITY()
INSERT INTO ...; SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY() AS NewID
. And I also tried to separate the 2 queries, SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY()
finally got value, but always is 0
, sad.
For SQL Server 2005 and up, and regardless of what type your primary key is, you could always use the OUTPUT
clause to return the values inserted:
INSERT INTO dbo.YourTable(col1, col2, ...., colN)
OUTPUT Inserted.PrimaryKey
VALUES(val1, val2, ....., valN)
PrimaryKey
isn't a keyword (and will result in Invalid column name 'PrimaryKey'.
if you try and use it. It should be replaced by your actual column name.
PrimaryKey
to illustrate that here, whatever column is defined as primary key needs to be used (since the OP didn't mention what column is his primary key)
SQL Server:
You can use @@IDENTITY
. After an insert statement, you can run:
select @@identity
This will give you the primary key of the record you just inserted. If you are planning to use it later, I suggest saving it:
set @MyIdentity = @@identity
If you are using this in a stored procedure and want to access it back in your application, make sure to have nocount off.
IDENTITY
column - I would recommend you use SCOPE_IDENTITY()
rather than @@IDENTITY
For MySQL, use LAST_INSERT_ID()
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/getting-unique-id.html
You should also be able to start a transaction, insert the row, and select the row using some field that has a unique value that you just inserted, like a timestamp or guid. This should work in pretty much any RDBMS that supports transactions, as long as you have a good unique field to select the row with.
If you need to retrieve the new index in MS SQL when there are triggers on the table then you have to use a little workaround. A simple OUTPUT will not work. You have to do something like this (in VB.NET):
DECLARE @newKeyTbl TABLE (newKey INT);
INSERT INTO myDbName(myFieldName) OUTPUT INSERTED.myKeyName INTO @newKeyTbl VALUES('myValue'); " & _
SELECT newKey FROM @newKeyTbl;"
If using .NET, then the return value from this query can be directly cast to an integer (you have to call "ExecuteScalar" on the .NET SqlCommand to get the return).
For SQLite:
SELECT [Column_1], [Column_2],... [Column_n]
FROM [YourTable]
WHERE rowid = (SELECT last_insert_rowid())
whereas:
If you'd created YourTable with primary key replaced rowid (i.e. one column pk defined as INTEGER PRIMARY KEY) you just use:
SELECT last_insert_rowid()
Which is a common case.
Finally, this wont work for WITHOUT_ROWID tables.
Please Check:
rowid
, not the primary key, as requested by the OP), but it is an answer. I'm voting Looks OK.
Jan 22, 2019 at 17:59
For PostgreSQL,
INSERT INTO tablename (col1, col2, ...)
VALUES (val1, val2, ...)
RETURNING idcol;
The optional RETURNING clause causes INSERT to compute and return value(s) based on each row actually inserted (or updated, if an ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE clause was used). This is primarily useful for obtaining values that were supplied by defaults, such as a serial sequence number. However, any expression using the table's columns is allowed.
For Postgresql:
SELECT CURRVAL(pg_get_serial_sequence('schema.table','id'))
RETURNING
clause of INSERT
command. To quote the doc: The optional RETURNING clause causes INSERT to compute and return value(s) based on each row actually inserted. This is primarily useful for obtaining values that were supplied by defaults, such as a serial sequence number.
May 22, 2015 at 1:04
select MAX(id_column) from table
That, in theory, should return you that last inserted id. If it's a busy database with many inserts going on it may not get the one you just did but another.
Anyhow, an alternative to other methods.