I've got a table with several columns making up the primary key. The nature of the data stored allows some of these fields to have NULL
values. I have designed my table as such:
CREATE TABLE `test` (
`Field1` SMALLINT(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`Field2` DECIMAL(5,2) UNSIGNED NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`Field1`, `Field2`)
)
COLLATE='latin1_swedish_ci'
ENGINE=InnoDB;
However, when I run describe test
it shows like this:
|| *Field* || *Type* || *Null* || *Key* || *Default* || *Extra*
|| Field1 || smallint(5) unsigned || NO || PRI || ||
|| Field2 || decimal(5,2) unsigned || NO || PRI || 0.00 ||
And I keep getting an error when inserting a NULL
value.
Column 'Field2' cannot be null
Is this because a field that is part of a primary key cannot be null? What are my alternatives besides using, say, '0' for NULL
?
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…