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