I was wondering can some give me an explanation on how to assign primary and foreign keys in pgAdmin?
I can\'t find any information online.
For example...I\'ve g
Yes, there is a way to add Primary & Foreign Keys in pgAdmin.
Tested in pgAdmin III Ver.1.16.1 (Windows 7)
And you are all set.
You can fill more things if you want, but now you know how to get there.
In Pgadmin3,
Go to table which you want to add the PK or FK and right click and choose properties.
Go to constraints tab.
Choose Primary Key or Foreign Key in drop down list which beside of Add button.
And than click on add button.
Go to columns tab.
Choose the column name in drop down list ,which you want to add .
Click add button.
Click Ok button.
Hope it will helpful for you !
pgAdmin 4.29 doesn't allow you to create foreign keys in the same dialog as table creation. To create a foreign key, create the table first and then expand the table, column and foreign key nodes in the explorer. Chose "Create".
There is no option in pgAdmin to add a column to an existing table and make it the primary key at the same time, because this is hardly possible.
A primary key column needs to hold unique non-null values. Upon adding a column to an existing table, it holds NULL values. So you have to enter unique values before you can add a UNIQUE
or PRIMARY KEY
constraint.
There is an exception to that rule, though: If you add a serial column, unique values are inserted automatically. In this case, you can also define it PRIMARY KEY right away:
ALTER TABLE student ADD COLUMN student_number serial PRIMARY KEY;
This works in PostgreSQL 9.1. I am not sure it does in older versions, too.
pgAdmin does not incorporate this special case for serial
columns in the "New column..." dialog at this time (version 1.14).
The below SQL will work
SELECT
tc.constraint_name, tc.table_name, kcu.column_name,
ccu.table_name AS foreign_table_name,
ccu.column_name AS foreign_column_name
FROM
information_schema.table_constraints AS tc
JOIN information_schema.key_column_usage AS kcu
ON tc.constraint_name = kcu.constraint_name
JOIN information_schema.constraint_column_usage AS ccu
ON ccu.constraint_name = tc.constraint_name
WHERE constraint_type = 'PRIMARY KEY' AND tc.table_name='table_name';