Primary Key in SQL – Definition, Syntax, and Best Practices


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Introduction

In SQL, text data types are used to store alphanumeric values like names, addresses, emails, and descriptions. Choosing the correct text type — CHAR, VARCHAR, or TEXT — is important for optimizing storage space, query speed, and database performance.

In this section, you'll learn the definitions, differences, and best use cases for each text data type.




1. CHAR (Fixed-Length String)

CHAR is used to store fixed-length strings. If the stored string is shorter than the defined length, SQL automatically pads it with spaces to match the specified size.



Features:

  • Fixed length
  • Fast and predictable performance
  • Uses extra storage if the data is often shorter than the specified length


Syntax:


column_name CHAR(length);

length = number of characters (1 to 255 depending on the database system)



Example:


CREATE TABLE countries (
country_code CHAR(2),
country_name CHAR(50)
    );

country_code like 'US', 'IN', 'UK' will always take 2 characters.



When to Use CHAR:


  • Data with a constant size, such as country codes, gender ('M', 'F'), state abbreviations
  • Fixed-format fields like credit card types ('VISA', 'MC')
  • When exact storage size is known and consistent



2. VARCHAR (Variable-Length String)

VARCHAR stands for Variable Character. It stores variable-length strings, meaning only the actual characters are stored without unnecessary padding.



Features:


  • Variable length
  • More space-efficient than CHAR for varying-length text
  • Slightly slower than CHAR when processing large volumes (because of extra calculations for string lengths)


Syntax:


column_name VARCHAR(length);

length = maximum number of characters allowed



Example:


CREATE TABLE employees (
first_name VARCHAR(50),
email VARCHAR(100)
    );

Names and emails can vary in length, making VARCHAR ideal.



When to Use VARCHAR:


  • Data with unpredictable or variable length
  • Names, emails, addresses, and descriptions under 255-65535 characters
  • Most general-purpose text fields




3. TEXT (Large Text Field)

TEXT is used to store large amounts of text like long descriptions, blog posts, comments, or articles.



Features:

  • Meant for large text storage (up to 65,535 characters for standard TEXT in MySQL)
  • Cannot have a default value (in some databases like MySQL)
  • TEXT fields are stored outside the main table with a pointer reference
  • Different variants exist (TINYTEXT, MEDIUMTEXT, LONGTEXT) for various sizes


Syntax:


column_name TEXT;


Example:


CREATE TABLE articles (
id INT,
title VARCHAR(255),
body TEXT
   );

body will store the full article content, which can be very large.



When to Use TEXT:


  • Long-form text fields (comments, articles, reviews, reports)
  • Data that exceeds normal VARCHAR limits
  • When exact storage requirements are unknown or potentially very large



Quick Comparison: CHAR vs VARCHAR vs TEXT


Feature CHAR VARCHAR TEXT
Storage Fixed length Variable length Variable, large storage
Max Size Up to 255 chars 65,535 bytes (typically) 65,535+ chars (depends on type)
Performance Fast for fixed-size Efficient for variable text Slightly slower for queries
Indexing Full index support Full index support Limited in some DBs
Best Use Case Codes, fixed formats Names, addresses, emails Articles, long descriptions



Important Tips


  • Use CHAR only when all values will be exactly the same length
  • VARCHAR is the best choice for most standard text fields
  • Reserve TEXT for content that exceeds VARCHAR limits
  • Consider VARCHAR(MAX) in SQL Server for large text that might need indexing
  • Be aware that TEXT fields may have limitations on default values and full-text indexing


What Is a Primary Key?

A primary key is a column or a combination of columns in a SQL table that uniquely identifies each row in that table. It ensures that:

  • Each value is unique
  • No value is NULL

The primary key is essential for maintaining data integrity, and it serves as the main identifier for table records.

Key Properties of a Primary Key

  • Uniqueness: No two rows can have the same primary key value.
  • Not Null: Primary key columns cannot contain NULL.
  • Only One Per Table: Each table can have only one primary key.
  • Often used to establish relationships between tables using foreign keys.

Syntax to Define a Primary Key

1. Defining in Table Creation

CREATE TABLE users (
  id INT PRIMARY KEY,
  username VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
  email VARCHAR(100)
);

Here, the id column is the primary key.

2. Composite Primary Key

You can define a primary key using multiple columns (also called a composite key):

CREATE TABLE enrollments (
  student_id INT,
  course_id INT,
  PRIMARY KEY (student_id, course_id)
);

This ensures that a student can only be enrolled once in a specific course.

3. Add Primary Key to Existing Table

ALTER TABLE users
ADD CONSTRAINT pk_user_id PRIMARY KEY (id);

You can name the constraint for easy reference.

Primary Key vs Unique Key

Feature PRIMARY KEY UNIQUE
Enforces Uniqueness Yes Yes
Allows NULL No Yes (one or more NULLs)
One Per Table Yes Multiple allowed
Default Index Yes Yes

Attempting to Insert Duplicates or NULLs

-- First insert works
INSERT INTO users (id, username) VALUES (1, 'alex');

-- Duplicate primary key - error!
INSERT INTO users (id, username) VALUES (1, 'john');

-- NULL primary key - error!
INSERT INTO users (id, username) VALUES (NULL, 'maria');

Dropping a Primary Key

ALTER TABLE users
DROP PRIMARY KEY;

Note: Some databases require the column to be modified afterward if it was defined as NOT NULL via the primary key.

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