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You create a reflexive relationship to link a column or columns in a table with another column or columns in the same table. For example, suppose the employee table has an emp_id column and a mgr_id column. Because each manager is also an employee, you relate these two columns by drawing a relationship line from the table to itself. This relationship ensures each manager ID that is added to the table matches an existing employee ID.
Before you create a relationship, you must first define a primary key or unique constraint for your table. You then relate the primary key column to a matching column. Once you create the relationship, the matching column becomes a foreign key of the table.
To draw a reflexive relationship
- In your database diagram, click the row selector for the database column that you want to relate to another column and drag the pointer outside the table until a line appears. 
- Drag the line back to the selected table. 
- Release the mouse button. The Tables and Columns dialog box appears. 
- Select the foreign key column and the primary key table and column with which you want form a relationship. 
- Choose OK twice to create the relationship. 
When you run queries against a table, you can use a reflexive relationship to create a self-join. For information about querying tables with joins, see Querying with Joins (Visual Database Tools).
See Also
Other Resources
Working with Relationships (Visual Database Tools)
Querying with Joins (Visual Database Tools)