Composite Primary key vs additional "ID" column?

29,936

Solution 1

Say that {Author, Title, Edition} uniquely identifies a book, then the following holds:

  1. It is a superkey -- uniquely identifies a tuple (row).

  2. It is irreducible -- removing any of the columns does not make it a key any more.

  3. It is a candidate key -- an irreducible superkey is a candidate key.

Now let's consider the ID (integer)

I can reason that the Book table key will show up in few other tables as a foreign key and also in few indexes. So, it will take quite a bit of space -- say three columns x 40 characters (or whatever...) -- in each of these tables plus in matching indexes.

In order to make these "other" tables and indexes smaller, I can add a unique-integer-column to the Book table to be used as a key which will be referenced as a foreign key. Say something like:

alter table Book add BookID integer not null identity;

With BookID being (must be) unique too, the Book table now has two candidate keys.

Now I can select the BookID as a primary key.

alter table Book add constraint pk_Book primary key (BookID);

However, the {Author,Title,Edition} must stay a key (unique) in order to prevent something like this:

BookID  Author      Title           Edition
-----------------------------------------------
  1      C.J.Date  Database Design     1
  2      C.J.Date  Database Design     1

To sum it up, adding the BookID -- and choosing it as the primary -- did not stop {Author, Title, Edition} being a (candidate) key. It still must have its own unique constraint and usually the matching index.

Also note that from the design point, this decision was done on the "physical level". In general, on the logical level of design, this ID does not exists -- it got introduced during the consideration of column sizes and indexes. So, the physical schema was derived from the logical one. Depending on the DB size, RDBMS and hardware used, none of that size-reasoning may have measurable effect -- so using {Author, Title, Edition} as a PK may be perfectly good design -- until proven differently.

Solution 2

In general, you don't want the primary key to change value. This is why blind or surrogate primary keys are used.

Let's assume you created your Book table with Author as part of the primary key.

Suppose you found out after about a year that you misspelled "Ray Bradbury". Or even worse, you misspelled "Rachael Bloom". Just imagine how many database rows you would have to modify to correct the misspelling. Just imagine how many index references have to be changed.

However, if you have an Author table with a surrogate key, you only have to correct one row. No indexes have to be changed.

Finally, database table names are usually singular (Book), rather than plural (Books).

Solution 3

Another good reason for using the surrogate primary key scenario is if the uniqueness constraint should change in the future (say, ISBN needs to be added to make a book unique). Rekeying your data will be much easier.

Solution 4

There are many articles related to this. The problems with composite key in your case:

  1. hard to link books with other entities
  2. Hard to edit them in a grid as most grids are not supporting composite keys (e.g. kendo grid, jqgrid)
  3. You might misspell Author, Title, Edition

It would be also good to normalize your data and store just an ID to the author like (dasblinkenlight) suggested. Worst case scenario, he/she will change his/hers name (e.g. she get's married, and she likes her new name).

Share:
29,936
user997112
Author by

user997112

Updated on April 01, 2020

Comments

  • user997112
    user997112 about 4 years

    If we had a table like this:

    Books (pretend "ISBN" doesn't exist)

    • Author
    • Title
    • Edition
    • Year of publication
    • Price

    One could argue that {Author,Title,Edition} could be a candidate/primary key.

    What determines whether the candidate/primary key should be {Author,Title,Edition} or whether an ID column should be used, with {Author,Title,Edition} a unique index/key constraint?

    So is

    • Author (PK)
    • Title (PK)
    • Edition (PK)
    • Year of publication
    • Price

    better, or:

    • ID (PK)
    • Author
    • Title
    • Edition
    • Year of publication
    • Price

    where {Author,Title,Edition} is an additional unique index/constraint?