Loading docs/intro/tutorial01.txt +5 −5 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -433,12 +433,12 @@ statements for the polls app): BEGIN; CREATE TABLE "polls_question" ( "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, "question_text" varchar(200) NOT NULL, "pub_date" datetime NOT NULL ); CREATE TABLE "polls_choice" ( "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, "question_id" integer NOT NULL REFERENCES "polls_poll" ("id"), "choice_text" varchar(200) NOT NULL, "votes" integer NOT NULL Loading @@ -462,9 +462,9 @@ Note the following: * The foreign key relationship is made explicit by a ``REFERENCES`` statement. * It's tailored to the database you're using, so database-specific field types such as ``auto_increment`` (MySQL), ``serial`` (PostgreSQL), or ``integer primary key`` (SQLite) are handled for you automatically. Same * It's tailored to the database you're using, so database-specific field types such as ``auto_increment`` (MySQL), ``serial`` (PostgreSQL), or ``integer primary key autoincrement`` (SQLite) are handled for you automatically. Same goes for quoting of field names -- e.g., using double quotes or single quotes. Loading Loading
docs/intro/tutorial01.txt +5 −5 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -433,12 +433,12 @@ statements for the polls app): BEGIN; CREATE TABLE "polls_question" ( "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, "question_text" varchar(200) NOT NULL, "pub_date" datetime NOT NULL ); CREATE TABLE "polls_choice" ( "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, "id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, "question_id" integer NOT NULL REFERENCES "polls_poll" ("id"), "choice_text" varchar(200) NOT NULL, "votes" integer NOT NULL Loading @@ -462,9 +462,9 @@ Note the following: * The foreign key relationship is made explicit by a ``REFERENCES`` statement. * It's tailored to the database you're using, so database-specific field types such as ``auto_increment`` (MySQL), ``serial`` (PostgreSQL), or ``integer primary key`` (SQLite) are handled for you automatically. Same * It's tailored to the database you're using, so database-specific field types such as ``auto_increment`` (MySQL), ``serial`` (PostgreSQL), or ``integer primary key autoincrement`` (SQLite) are handled for you automatically. Same goes for quoting of field names -- e.g., using double quotes or single quotes. Loading