63

I want to add complex unique key to existing table. Key contains from 4 fields (user_id, game_id, date, time). But table have non unique rows. I understand that I can remove all duplicate dates and after that add complex key.

Maybe exist another solution without searching all duplicate data. (like add unique ignore etc).

UPD I searched, how can remove duplicate mysql rows - i think it's good solution. Remove duplicates using only a MySQL query?

  • 2
    You can't have duplicates if you create a unique key. – Tchoupi Mar 6 '13 at 18:38
128

You can do as yAnTar advised

ALTER TABLE TABLE_NAME ADD Id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY

OR

You can add a constraint

ALTER TABLE TABLE_NAME ADD CONSTRAINT constr_ID UNIQUE (user_id, game_id, date, time)

But I think to not lose your existing data, you can add an indentity column and then make a composite key.

  • 1
    what is an IDENTITY column ? I can find no reference of it in the doc except something related to AUTO_INCREMENT : dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/example-auto-increment.html – challet Jan 7 '16 at 13:39
  • 4
    As mentioned by @challet the key word in MySQL is NOT IDENTITY but AUTO_INCREMENT. dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/example-auto-increment.html – MER Jan 11 '16 at 22:28
  • 1
    For clarity the mysql syntax is: ALTER TABLE TABLE_NAME ADD Id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY – Brett Sutton Oct 29 '18 at 1:06
  • The OP did not (explicitly) specify a particular database. IDENTITY is the correct syntax for MS/Oracle SQL-Server and perhaps other non MySQL/MariaDB dialects, for them use the AUTO_INCREMENT syntax . – fcm Mar 10 '19 at 10:48
  • The question is tagged with 'mysql', so the solution should apply to that DBMS – Andrew Lalis Apr 17 '19 at 10:05
19

The proper syntax would be - ALTER TABLE Table_Name ADD UNIQUE (column_name)

Example

ALTER TABLE  0_value_addition_setup ADD UNIQUE (`value_code`)
  • 15
    Although this code may help to solve the problem, it doesn't explain why and/or how it answers the question. Providing this additional context would significantly improve its long-term educational value. Please edit your answer to add explanation, including what limitations and assumptions apply. – Toby Speight Oct 5 '16 at 14:13
10

I had to solve a similar problem. I inherited a large source table from MS Access with nearly 15000 records that did not have a primary key, which I had to normalize and make CakePHP compatible. One convention of CakePHP is that every table has a the primary key, that it is first column and that it is called 'id'. The following simple statement did the trick for me under MySQL 5.5:

ALTER TABLE `database_name`.`table_name` 
ADD COLUMN `id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT FIRST,
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);

This added a new column 'id' of type integer in front of the existing data ("FIRST" keyword). The AUTO_INCREMENT keyword increments the ids starting with 1. Now every dataset has a unique numerical id. (Without the AUTO_INCREMENT statement all rows are populated with id = 0).

3

I am providing my solution with the assumption on your business logic. Basicall in my design i will allow the table to store only one record for a user-game combination. So I will add a composite key to the table.

PRIMARY KEY (`user_id`,`game_id`)
2

Either create an auto-increment id or a UNIQUE id and add it to the natural key you are talking about with the 4 fields. this will make every row in the table unique...

0

Set Multiple Unique key into table

ALTER TABLE table_name
ADD CONSTRAINT UC_table_name UNIQUE (field1,field2);
0

For MySQL:

ALTER TABLE MyTable ADD MyId INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY;

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