Thank you.

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On Thursday, September 12, 2019, 1:09 AM, Hossein Ghiyasi Mehr 
<ghiyasim...@gmail.com> wrote:

Update in Cassandra is upsert (update or insert). So when you update a row 
which isn't exist, it will create it."IF EXIST" can be used in some queries.
On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 8:35 AM A <htt...@yahoo.com.invalid> wrote:

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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