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Home/ Questions/Q 911339
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T17:11:23+00:00 2026-05-15T17:11:23+00:00

If I define a MySQL index over two fields, how do I find out,

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If I define a MySQL index over two fields, how do I find out, which two belong together (using MySQL commands).

Here is an example table:

mysql> DESCRIBE lansuite_wiki_versions;
+-----------+-----------------------+------+-----+-------------------+-----------------------------+
| Field     | Type                  | Null | Key | Default           | Extra                       |
+-----------+-----------------------+------+-----+-------------------+-----------------------------+
| versionid | int(11)               | NO   | PRI | 0                 |                             |
| postid    | int(11)               | NO   | PRI | 0                 |                             |
| date      | timestamp             | NO   |     | CURRENT_TIMESTAMP | on update CURRENT_TIMESTAMP |
| userid    | mediumint(8) unsigned | NO   | MUL | 0                 |                             |
| text      | text                  | NO   | MUL | NULL              |                             |
| test1     | int(11)               | NO   | MUL | NULL              |                             |
| test2     | int(11)               | NO   |     | NULL              |                             |
+-----------+-----------------------+------+-----+-------------------+-----------------------------+
7 rows in set (0.00 sec)

This table has indexes defined over:

  • versionid + postid
  • userid
  • test1 + test2
  • text

I know this, because I have assigned them and see them in phpmyadmin.
But I want to see it in my application as well.
So I found this mySQL command:

mysql> SHOW INDEX FROM lansuite_wiki_versions;
+------------------------+------------+----------+--------------+-------------+-----------+-------------+----------+--------+------+------------+---------+
| Table                  | Non_unique | Key_name | Seq_in_index | Column_name | Collation | Cardinality | Sub_part | Packed | Null | Index_type | Comment |
+------------------------+------------+----------+--------------+-------------+-----------+-------------+----------+--------+------+------------+---------+
| lansuite_wiki_versions |          0 | PRIMARY  |            1 | versionid   | A         |        NULL |     NULL | NULL   |      | BTREE      |         |
| lansuite_wiki_versions |          0 | PRIMARY  |            2 | postid      | A         |         144 |     NULL | NULL   |      | BTREE      |         |
| lansuite_wiki_versions |          1 | userid   |            1 | userid      | A         |           4 |     NULL | NULL   |      | BTREE      |         |
| lansuite_wiki_versions |          1 | test     |            1 | test1       | A         |           1 |     NULL | NULL   |      | BTREE      |         |
| lansuite_wiki_versions |          1 | test     |            2 | test2       | A         |           1 |     NULL | NULL   |      | BTREE      |         |
| lansuite_wiki_versions |          1 | text     |            1 | text        | NULL      |           1 |     NULL | NULL   |      | FULLTEXT   |         |
+------------------------+------------+----------+--------------+-------------+-----------+-------------+----------+--------+------+------------+---------+
6 rows in set (0.00 sec)

But how do I see versionid + postid is connected?
I can see Seq_in_index counting up. So can I rely on that versionid and postid form a common index, just because they are standing in rows next to each other in this output and the Seq_in_index countin up?
Or is there an other command, that shows me which indexes are defined?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T17:11:24+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 5:11 pm

    The Key_name will be unique for each index; columns which are part of the same index will have the same name in this table.

    seq_in_index gives you the sequence.

    It may make more sense if you look at the INFORMATION_SCHEMA table containing indexes (look at documentation).

    I assume you are writing a tool to programmatically inspect the database structure.

    If you are a human and want to see the table structure, I recommend SHOW CREATE TABLE instead.

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