Can a foreign key refer to a primary key in the same table?

This may be a good explanation example

CREATE TABLE employees (
id INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
managerId INTEGER REFERENCES employees(id), 
name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL
);

INSERT INTO employees(id, managerId, name) VALUES(1, NULL, 'John');
INSERT INTO employees(id, managerId, name) VALUES(2, 1, 'Mike');

-- Explanation: -- In this example. -- John is Mike's manager. Mike does not manage anyone. -- Mike is the only employee who does not manage anyone.


I think the question is a bit confusing.

If you mean "can foreign key 'refer' to a primary key in the same table?", the answer is a firm yes as some replied. For example, in an employee table, a row for an employee may have a column for storing manager's employee number where the manager is also an employee and hence will have a row in the table like a row of any other employee.

If you mean "can column(or set of columns) be a primary key as well as a foreign key in the same table?", the answer, in my view, is a no; it seems meaningless. However, the following definition succeeds in SQL Server!

create table t1(c1 int not null primary key foreign key references t1(c1))

But I think it is meaningless to have such a constraint unless somebody comes up with a practical example.

AmanS, in your example d_id in no circumstance can be a primary key in Employee table. A table can have only one primary key. I hope this clears your doubt. d_id is/can be a primary key only in department table.