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Applies To:
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 R3, Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 R2, Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 Feature Pack, Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012
This topic describes several terms and concepts of keys on data tables, as they apply to Microsoft Dynamics AX.
All keys are unique keys, meaning they disallow duplicate values and null values.
Terminology for Major Concepts of Keys
This section describes the terminology for keys that appear in property names in the AOT
Properties
window.
Primary Key
A primary key is one type of key. The other type of key is an alternate key. There is a maximum of one primary key per table, whereas a table can have several alternate keys. The primary key is usually the type of key that other tables, called child tables, refer to when a foreign key field in those other tables need a relational identifier.
Starting in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 the primary key for every new table is always enforced by an index that has exactly one field. The one field is usually an incremented number or a completely meaningless number that is generated by the system. For new tables the default is a primary key based on the RecId field. This is represented as the surrogate key in the user interface.
The following table describes the
PrimaryIndex
property and other major properties that are related to keys.
PrimaryIndex
The drop-down list contains the surrogate key plus every index on the table that has its
AlternateKey
property set to
Yes
.
CreateRecIdIndex
This property controls whether the system creates a unique index on the RecId field. The default value is
Yes
. This is the basis of the surrogate key.
No other field is added to this index, not even DataAreaId.
ReplacementKey
The drop-down list contains every index that has its
AlternateKey
property set to
Yes
.
You might change the default blank value to an index whose field values within each record provide a name or other moniker that is meaningful to people. If a
ReplacementKey
is chosen, its fields can appear on forms to helpfully identify each record.
The
ReplacementKey
should be a set of fields that represent the natural key.
ClusterIndex
The
ClusterIndex
value is given to the underlying Microsoft SQL Server database system as a performance tuning choice. This choice generally controls the physical sequence in which the records are stored in the underlying database.
The following AOT image highlights the table properties that are related to keys.
Properties of the AtomicElement demonstration table
Alternate Key
A table can have several alternate keys. Any one alternate key can switch to being the primary key, if the alternate key is comprised of only one field.
A table can reference the alternate key of another table. However, it is more common for a table to reference the primary key of another table. As an option, an alternate key can be chosen as the
ReplacementKey
of a table.
In practice each alternate key relies on a unique index for its implementation and enforcement. However, a unique index alone does not make an alternate key. The
AlternateKey
property must be set to
Yes
to make a unique index be an alternate key.
The following table describes properties on the AOT node for an index.
AllowDuplicates
No
means that the combined fields of the index must together make a value in each record which no other record has.
AlternateKey
Yes
means that other tables can create foreign key relations that reference this key, as an alternative to referencing the primary key.
Indexes with two or more fields cannot have their
AlternateKey
property value set to
Yes
.
ValidTimeStateKey
A key that is marked as a valid time state key is not a candidate key for child tables to reference in their foreign key relations. Instead, this key is meant for managing date effective data in its own table.
The default is
No
. This field can be
Yes
only if the
ValidTimeStateFieldType
property is
Yes
on the table.
Yes
means this key contains the
ValidFrom
and
ValidTo
fields.
The
ValidTimeStateKey
property cannot be set to
Yes
when the
AlternateKey
property is set to
No
.
The following image shows that the
SymIdx
index is an alternate key. Its
AlternateKey
property is set to
Yes
.
The properties of the SymIdx index
Relation
In Microsoft Dynamics AX a relation represents a foreign key. The following image shows that the
AtomStIdx
alternate key of the
AtomicState
parent table is referenced by this foreign key of the
AtomicElement
child table. The foreign key is comprised of the
AtomicStateName
field.
The properties for the AtomStFkyRel relation
The following image displays the
AtomStIdx
alternate key on the
AtomicState
table. The previous
AtomStFkyRel
relation references this alternate key.
The properties of the AtomStIdx alternate key and index
For more information about the properties of table relations, see
Table Relation Properties
.
ReplacementKey
A replacement key is an alternate key that the system can display on forms instead of a meaningless numeric primary key value. Each table can have a maximum of one replacement key.
The replacement key is chosen by setting the
ReplacementKey
property on the table. The drop-down list offers every alternate key as an available value. In the previous image of the
AtomicElement
table properties, the
ReplacementKey
property is
SymIdx
.
Other Terminology for Keys
In Microsoft Dynamics AX, there are other terms that are used to describe table keys. These terms do not appear as property names in Microsoft Dynamics AX. These terms are described in the following table.
foreign key
In Microsoft Dynamics AX, an AOT node under MyTable >
Relations
represents a foreign key. For more information, see the previous
Relations
section in this topic.
natural key
A key whose value has meaning to people. Most replacement keys are natural keys.
surrogate key
A key whose value has no meaning to people. A large number generated by the system, such as RecId, could be a surrogate key.
unique key
A broad term that applies to primary keys and to alternate keys. It does not apply to foreign keys. This term emphasizes that all values for a given key must be unique within one table. All fields in a unique key must be not-nullable.
See also
Indexes and Keys
Announcements:
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