MySQL: AFTER INSERT Trigger
This MySQL tutorial explains how to create an AFTER INSERT Trigger in MySQL with syntax and examples.
Description
An AFTER INSERT Trigger means that MySQL will fire this trigger after the INSERT operation is executed.
Syntax
The syntax to create an AFTER INSERT Trigger in MySQL is:
CREATE TRIGGER trigger_name AFTER INSERT ON table_name FOR EACH ROW BEGIN -- variable declarations -- trigger code END;
Parameters or Arguments
- trigger_name
- The name of the trigger to create.
- AFTER INSERT
- It indicates that the trigger will fire after the INSERT operation is executed.
- table_name
- The name of the table that the trigger is created on.
Restrictions
- You can not create an AFTER trigger on a view.
- You can not update the NEW values.
- You can not update the OLD values.
Note
- See also how to create AFTER DELETE, AFTER INSERT, AFTER UPDATE, BEFORE DELETE, and BEFORE UPDATE triggers.
- See also how to drop a trigger.
Example
Let's look at an example of how to create an AFTER INSERT trigger using the CREATE TRIGGER statement in MySQL.
If you had a table created as follows:
CREATE TABLE contacts ( contact_id INT(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, last_name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL, first_name VARCHAR(25), birthday DATE, CONSTRAINT contacts_pk PRIMARY KEY (contact_id) );
We could then use the CREATE TRIGGER statement to create an AFTER INSERT trigger as follows:
DELIMITER // CREATE TRIGGER contacts_after_insert AFTER INSERT ON contacts FOR EACH ROW BEGIN DECLARE vUser varchar(50); -- Find username of person performing the INSERT into table SELECT USER() INTO vUser; -- Insert record into audit table INSERT INTO contacts_audit ( contact_id, created_date, created_by) VALUES ( NEW.contact_id, SYSDATE(), vUser ); END; // DELIMITER ;
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