MariaDB CHECK Keyword
The MariaDB CHECK keyword is a constraint which is used to ensures that all values in a column of a table satisfies specified condition. By defining a CHECK constraint on a table it limits the values that can be entered for this column. Using AND and OR operator, a CHECK constraint can constructed in such a way that can limit the values in certain columns based on values in other columns in the row.
MariaDB CHECK constraint with CREATE TABLE
The below mentioned statement creates a table called Employee which contains five columns: EmpID, Name, City, Age and Salary in which CHECK constraint is applied on column Age.
CREATE TABLE Employee ( EmpID INT NOT NULL, Name VARCHAR(255), City VARCHAR(100), Age INT CHECK (Age >= 21), Salary DECIMAL(18,2) );
Alternatively, it can also be created as mentioned below:
CREATE TABLE Employee ( EmpID INT NOT NULL, Name VARCHAR(255), City VARCHAR(100), Age INT, Salary DECIMAL(18,2), CHECK (Age >= 21) );
To provide a name to CHECK constraint, and to define a CHECK constraint on multiple columns (say City and Age), the following statement can be used:
CREATE TABLE Employee ( EmpID INT NOT NULL, Name VARCHAR(255), City VARCHAR(100), Age INT, Salary DECIMAL(18,2), CONSTRAINT CHK_Employee CHECK(Age >= 21 AND City = 'London') );
MariaDB CHECK constraint with ALTER TABLE
In the above example, a table called Employee is created. To enforce CHECK constraint on Age column, the statement is given below:
ALTER TABLE Employee ADD CHECK (Age >= 21);
To provide a name to CHECK constraint, and to define a CHECK constraint on multiple columns (say Age and City), the statement is given below:
ALTER TABLE Employee ADD CONSTRAINT CHK_Employee CHECK (Age >= 21 AND City = 'London');
DROP CHECK constraint
To drop CHK_Employee CHECK constraint from table called Employee, the statement is given below:
ALTER TABLE Employee DROP CONSTRAINT CHK_Employee;
❮ MariaDB Keywords