Hello,
I have a basic question about choosing the primary key for a table. Now I am not really concerned on the particular field(s) chosen to be the primary key, but rather the potential states, if you will, that the key can be in.
Say I choose a multiple field primary key for a contact table of, say, LastName, FirstName, and PhoneNum.
I thought during an Access db project I was updating awhile ago using Access 97, it didn't require EVERY field of the multiple primary key to be filled in, as long as there was enough to make a unique key.
I am wondering if this is still the case for Access2000 primarily. From what I have read it appears that this is not the case or at least it is strongly not recommended. For my example would it be to have FirstName and LastName filled in but not PhoneNum. Then, if a new Contact were added with the same LastName and FirstName but a PhoneNum was also added, the PrimaryKey would essentially be unique still.
I know this definitely isn't the best example but it still states my point.
If anybody has any wisdom on the subject I'd greatly appreciate it!
Thanks!
Dana S.
I have a basic question about choosing the primary key for a table. Now I am not really concerned on the particular field(s) chosen to be the primary key, but rather the potential states, if you will, that the key can be in.
Say I choose a multiple field primary key for a contact table of, say, LastName, FirstName, and PhoneNum.
I thought during an Access db project I was updating awhile ago using Access 97, it didn't require EVERY field of the multiple primary key to be filled in, as long as there was enough to make a unique key.
I am wondering if this is still the case for Access2000 primarily. From what I have read it appears that this is not the case or at least it is strongly not recommended. For my example would it be to have FirstName and LastName filled in but not PhoneNum. Then, if a new Contact were added with the same LastName and FirstName but a PhoneNum was also added, the PrimaryKey would essentially be unique still.
I know this definitely isn't the best example but it still states my point.
If anybody has any wisdom on the subject I'd greatly appreciate it!
Thanks!
Dana S.