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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T19:10:31+00:00 2026-05-10T19:10:31+00:00

I’m just getting started working with foreign keys for the first time and I’m

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I’m just getting started working with foreign keys for the first time and I’m wondering if there’s a standard naming scheme to use for them?

Given these tables:

task (id, userid, title) note (id, taskid, userid, note); user (id, name) 

Where Tasks have Notes, Tasks are owned by Users, and Users author Notes.

How would the three foreign keys be named in this situation? Or alternatively, does it even matter at all?

Update: This question is about foreign key names, not field names!

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  1. 2026-05-10T19:10:31+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 7:10 pm

    The standard convention in SQL Server is:

    FK_ForeignKeyTable_PrimaryKeyTable 

    So, for example, the key between notes and tasks would be:

    FK_note_task 

    And the key between tasks and users would be:

    FK_task_user 

    This gives you an ‘at a glance’ view of which tables are involved in the key, so it makes it easy to see which tables a particular one (the first one named) depends on (the second one named). In this scenario the complete set of keys would be:

    FK_task_user FK_note_task FK_note_user 

    So you can see that tasks depend on users, and notes depend on both tasks and users.

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