I deleted 100 (of 500) rows from a table that has a clustered primary key made up of 2 column values. The WHERE
clause used a column not in any key or index.
DELETE myTABLE WHERE data1='0'
The rows were deleted, and I ran a query to check myself.
However, I attempted to insert the rows back into myTABLE using...
INSERT INTO myTABLE (pkval1, pkval2, data1, data2)
SELECT srcVal1, srcVal2, srcData1, srcData2
FROM mySourceTable
In mySourceTable
, the srcVal
and srcVal2
columns form a unique index, but are not the primary key.
The result was an error:
Violation of PRIMARY KEY constraint 'PK_MYTABLE' Cannot insert duplicate key in object 'dbo.myTable'. The duplicate key value is {a value in srcVal2}
I reviewed all the key values in mySourceTable
, and they were valid.
Question: If I deleted the rows, why wouldn't I be able to re-insert them?
I've never had this problem in many years of SQL programming. But I'm tired and I'm sure I'm blind to something simple.