Wednesday, February 28, 2018

ALTER TABLE Statement

ALTER TABLE Statement

Modifies the design of a table after it has been created with the CREATE TABLE statement.

Note:  The Microsoft Access database engine does not support the use of ALTER TABLE, or any of the data definition language statements, with non-Microsoft Access databases. Use the DAO Create methods instead.

Syntax

ALTER TABLE table {ADD {COLUMN field type[(size)] [NOT NULL] [CONSTRAINT index] |
ALTER COLUMN field type[(size)] |
CONSTRAINT multifieldindex} |
DROP {COLUMN field I CONSTRAINT indexname} }

The ALTER TABLE statement has these parts:

Part

Description

table

The name of the table to be altered.

field

The name of the field to be added to or deleted from table. Or, the name of the field to be altered in table.

type

The data type of field.

size

The field size in characters (Text and Binary fields only).

index

The index for field.

multifieldindex

The definition of a multiple-field index to be added to table.

indexname

The name of the multiple-field index to be removed.


Remarks

Using the ALTER TABLE statement you can alter an existing table in several ways. You can:

  • Use ADD COLUMN to add a new field to the table. You specify the field name, data type, and (for Text and Binary fields) an optional size. For example, the following statement adds a 25-character Text field called Notes to the Employees table:

ALTER TABLE Employees ADD COLUMN Notes TEXT(25)

You can also define an index on that field.

If you specify NOT NULL for a field then new records are required to have valid data in that field.

  • Use ALTER COLUMN to change the data type of an existing field. You specify the field name, the new data type, and an optional size for Text and Binary fields. For example, the following statement changes the data type of a field in the Employees table called ZipCode (originally defined as Integer) to a 10-character Text field:

ALTER TABLE Employees ALTER COLUMN ZipCode TEXT(10)

  • Use ADD CONSTRAINT to add a multiple-field index.

  • Use DROP COLUMN to delete a field. You specify only the name of the field.

  • Use DROP CONSTRAINT to delete a multiple-field index. You specify only the index name following the CONSTRAINT reserved word.

Note: 

  • You cannot add or delete more than one field or index at a time.

  • You can use the CREATE INDEX statement to add a single- or multiple-field index to a table, and you can use ALTER TABLE or the DROP statement to delete an index created with ALTER TABLE or CREATE INDEX.

  • You can use NOT NULL on a single field or within a named CONSTRAINT clause that applies to either a single field or to a multiple-field named CONSTRAINT. However, you can apply the NOT NULL restriction only once to a field. Attempting to apply this restriction more than once restuls in a run-time error.



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