>> I am thinking of creating an identity column to use it as primary key in my table. <<
**by definition** a key is a subset of the attributes of an entity. It is a LOGICAL construct. The proprietary, non-relational IDENTITY property is a PHYSICAL state of a particular release of a particular product on of a particular machine at of a particular time. It cannot have anything whatsoever to with your data model (you did build a data model, build a data dictionary and research your industry weeks before you started coding, didn't you?)
It is a handle to the row. This means that you are faking a sequential file's positional record number, so you can reference the physical storage location? Sure, I'd do this if I want to lose all the advantages of an abstract data model, SQL set oriented programming, carry extra data and destroy the portability of code!
More and more programmers who have absolutely no database training are being told to design a database. They are using GUIDs, IDENTITY, ROWID and other proprietary auto-numbering "features" in SQL products to imitate either a record number (sequential file system mindset) or OID (OO mindset) since they don't know anything else.
Experienced database designers tend toward intelligent keys they find in industry standard codes, such as UPC, VIN, GTIN, ISBN, etc. They know that they need to verify the data against the reality they are modeling. A trusted external source is a good thing to have.
The IDENTITY column is a holdover from the early programming languages which were very close to the hardware. For example, the fields (not columns; big difference) in a COBOL or FORTRAN program were assumed to be physically located in main storage in the order they were declared in the program. The languages have constructs using that model -- logical and physical implementations are practically one! The data has meaning BECAUSE of the program reading it (i.e. the same bits could be a character in one program and be an integer in another)
The early SQLs were based on existing file systems. The data was kept in physically contiguous disk pages, in physically contiguous rows, made up of physically contiguous columns. In short, just like a deck of punch cards or a magnetic tape. Most programmer still carry that mental model, which is why I keep doing that rant about file vs. table, row vs. record and column vs. field.
But physically contiguous storage is only one way of building a relational database and it is not the best one. The basic idea of a relational database is that user is not supposed to know *how* or *where* things are stored at all, much less write code that depends on the particular physical representation in a particular release of a particular product on particular hardware at a particular time.
One of the biggest errors is the IDENTITY column (actually property, not a column at all) in the Sybase/SQL Server family. People actually program with this "feature" and even use it as the primary key for the table! Now, let's go into painful details as to why this thing is bad.
The first practical consideration is that IDENTITY is proprietary and non-portable, so you know that you will have maintenance problems when you change releases or port your system to other products. Newbies actually think they will never port code! Perhaps they only work for companies that are failing and will be gone. Perhaps their code is such crap nobody else want their application.
But let's look at the logical problems. First try to create a table with two columns and try to make them both IDENTITY. If you cannot declare more than one column to be of a certain data type, then that thing is not a datatype at all, by definition. It is a property which belongs to the PHYSICAL table, not the LOGICAL data in the table.
Next, create a table with one column and make it an IDENTITY. Now try to insert, update and delete different numbers from it. If you cannot insert, update and delete rows from a table, then it is not a table by definition.
Finally create a simple table with one IDENTITY and a few other columns. Use a few statements like
INSERT INTO Foobar (a, b, c) VALUES ('a1', 'b1', 'c1'); INSERT INTO Foobar (a, b, c) VALUES ('a2', 'b2', 'c2'); INSERT INTO Foobar (a, b, c) VALUES ('a3', 'b3', 'c3');
To put a few rows into the table and notice that the IDENTITY sequentially numbered them in the order they were presented. If you delete a row, the gap in the sequence is not filled in and the sequence continues from the highest number that has ever been used in that column in that particular table. This is how we did record numbers in pre-allocated sequential files in the 1950's, by the way. A utility program would then "pack" or "compress" the records that were flagged as deleted or unused to move the empty space to the physical end of the physical file.
But now use a statement with a query expression in it, like this:
INSERT INTO Foobar (a, b, c) SELECT x, y, z FROM Floob;
Since a query result is a table, and a table is a set which has no ordering, what should the IDENTITY numbers be? The entire, whole, completed set is presented to Foobar all at once, not a row at a time. There are (n!) ways to number (n) rows, so which one do you pick? The answer has been to use whatever the *physical* order of the result set happened to be. That non-relational phrase "physical order" again!
But it is actually worse than that. If the same query is executed again, but with new statistics or after an index has been dropped or added, the new execution plan could bring the result set back in a different physical order.
Can you explain from a logical model why the same rows in the second query get different IDENTITY numbers? In the relational model, they should be treated the same if all the values of all the attributes are identical.
Using IDENTITY as a primary key is a sign that there is no data model, only an imitation of a sequential file system. Since this "magic, all-purpose, one-size-fits-all" pseudo-identifier exists only as a result of the physical state of a particular piece of hardware at a particular time as read by the current release of a particular database product, how do you verify that an entity has such a number in the reality you are modeling?
You will see newbies who design tables like this:
CREATE Drivers (driver_id IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, ssn CHAR(9) NOT NULL REFERENCES Personnel(ssn), vin CHAR(17) NOT NULL REFERENCES Motorpool(vin));
Now input data and submit the same row a thousand times, a million times. Your data integrity is trashed. The natural key was this:
CREATE Drivers (ssn CHAR(9) NOT NULL REFERENCES Personnel(ssn), vin CHAR(17) NOT NULL REFERENCES Motorpool(vin), PRIMARY KEY (ssn, vin));
To demonstrate, here is a typical idiot newbie schema -- you will them all over the news groups. I call them "idiots" because they always name the IDENTITY property column "id" in EVERY table. They don't understand basic data modeling -- one and only name for an attribute. About half the time they don't use any DRI, but let's show it.
CREATE TABLE MotorPool (id IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, ssn CHAR(9) NOT NULL REFERENCES Personnel(id), vin CHAR(17) NOT NULL REFERENCES Vehicle(id));
CREATE TABLE Personnel (id IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, ssn CHAR(9) NOT NULL UNIQUE, ..);
CREATE TABLE Vehicles (id IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, vin CHAR(17) NOT NULL UNIQUE, .);
Now change the natural key in Personnel:
UPDATE Personnel SET ssn = '666666666' WHERE ssn = '000000000';
Nothing happened in Motorpool, did it? You can do the same thing with a VIN.
Now you are REALLY thinking about relations and keys instead of 1950's sequential record numbering. Adding an IDENTITY column to either of these tables as a candidate key would be dangerously redundant; one query uses the IDENTITY and another uses the real key, and like a man with two watches, you are never sure what time it is.
Finally, an appeal to authority, with a quote from Dr. Codd: "..Database users may cause the system to generate or delete a surrogate, but they have no control over its value, nor is its value ever displayed to them .."(Dr. Codd in ACM TODS, pp 409-410) and Codd, E. (1979), Extending the database relational model to capture more meaning. ACM Transactions on Database Systems, 4(4). pp. 397-434.
This means that a surrogate ought to act like an index; created by the user, managed by the system and NEVER seen by a user. That means never used in queries, DRI or anything else that a user does.
Codd also wrote the following:
"There are three difficulties in employing user-controlled keys as permanent surrogates for entities.
(1) The actual values of user-controlled keys are determined by users and must therefore be subject to change by them (e.g. if two companies merge, the two employee databases might be combined with the result that some or all of the serial numbers might be changed.).
(2) Two relations may have user-controlled keys defined on distinct domains (e.g. one uses social security, while the other uses employee serial numbers) and yet the entities denoted are the same.
(3) It may be necessary to carry information about an entity either before it has been assigned a user-controlled key value or after it has ceased to have one (e.g. and applicant for a job and a retiree).
These difficulties have the important consequence that an equi-join on common key values may not yield the same result as a join on common entities. A solution - proposed in part [4] and more fully in [14] - is to introduce entity domains which contain system-assigned surrogates. Database users may cause the system to generate or delete a surrogate, but they have no control over its value, nor is its value ever displayed to them....." (Codd in ACM TODS, pp 409-410).
References
Codd, E. (1979), Extending the database relational model to capture more meaning. ACM Transactions on Database Systems, 4(4). pp. 397-434
>> But the problem is that once I delete some records [sic], the SQL Server would not reuse the IDs of the deleted records [sic]. So there will be holes in the sequence.<<
You need to read a book on SQL and RDBMS. Rows are not records; fields are not columns; tables are not files; there is no sequential access or ordering in an RDBMS, so "first", "next" and "last" are totally meaningless.
You are confusing the parking spaces with the automobiles. Automobiles have VIN numbers, not parking space numbers!!
>> I know many people use Identity columns to generate unique id. << And that is a major reason so many database project produce bad data, fail out right and why I could easily bill between $1000-2000 per day when I did clean up work or SQL training. Better than half of my clean up jobs used IDENTITY, GUIDs or other autonumbering schemes that could not be verified.
>> How do they deal with the holes in the identity columns? << Your mental model is data in a sequential file. You have no concept whasoever of what an RDBMS is. This question is what we used to do with magnetic tape files in the early 1960's.
You marked a record (not a row) as deleted on the tape as you processed it; this was usually a bit or byte flag at the start of each record. We also used record numbers, where the zero or negative values meant that the record was deleted.
Record number were handy because you did relative reads from the current position. For example, an order might consists of an order header record (the term "Header record" is still in use today! Look at some of the postings here) followed by detail records. The header would have a count of the number of details. So I could program my application to jump to the next order header with a little math. I would finally run the tape thru a program that closed up the gaps and re-numbered the records as it sorted them.
Look at the CURSOR reads in Standard SQL today; the whole cursor model is based on mag tape file systems. The reason for this is that all of the X3J Programming Language Standards have a sequential file model in them.
Every DB programmer ought to have to take a course in file systems and have to write a polyphase merge sort once in their education. That teach them why we stopped using file systems and maybe, just maybe, they will quit tryng to imitate 1950's technology in SQL.
--CELKO-- =========================== Please post DDL, so that people do not have to guess what the keys, constraints, Declarative Referential Integrity, datatypes, etc. in your schema are.
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