Good idea. Tried that and it doesn’t add anything to the existing table, which 
exists....


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On Wednesday, September 11, 2019, 9:08 PM, JOHN, BIBIN <bj9...@att.com> wrote:

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Use if exists clause.
 
  
 
UPDATE table
 
SET column ='something'
 
WHERE key = ‘value’ IF EXISTS;
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
From: A <htt...@yahoo.com.INVALID> 
Sent: Wednesday, September 11, 2019 11:05 PM
To: User cassandra.apache.org <user@cassandra.apache.org>
Subject: Update/where statement Adds Row
 
  
 
I have an update statement that has a where clause with the primary key 
(email,companyid).
 
  
 
When executed it always creates a new row. It’s like it’s not finding the 
existing row with the primary key.
 
  
 
I’m using Cassandra-driver.
 
  
 
What am I doing wrong? I don’t want a new row. Why doesn’t it seem to be using 
the where clause to identify the existing row?
 
  
 
Thanks,
 
Angel
 



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