August 2010
Intermediate to advanced
1500 pages
54h 49m
English
Article 1, “Designing Your Database Application,” on the companion CD, discusses the need to have one or more fields that provide a unique value to every row in your table. This field or group of fields with unique values is identified as the primary key. If a table doesn’t have a primary key, you can’t define a relationship between it and other tables, and Access 2010 has to guess how to link tables for you. Even if you define a primary key in your initial design, you might discover later that it doesn’t actually contain unique values. In that case, you might have to define a new field or fields to be the primary key.
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