To fix this, open the relation view of the `category` table and in the drop down at the bottom, select "name". If you now browse the link table again and hover the mouse over the `category_id` hyperlink, the value from the related category will be shown as tooltip.
phpMyAdmin allows relationships (similar to foreign keys) using MySQL-native
(InnoDB) methods when available and falling back on special phpMyAdmin-only
features when needed. There are two ways of editing these relations, with the
*relation view* and the drag-and-drop *designer* -- both of which are explained
You need to have configured the :ref:`linked-tables` for using phpMyAdmin
Currently the only MySQL table type that natively supports relationships is
InnoDB. When using an InnoDB table, phpMyAdmin will create real InnoDB
relations which will be enforced by MySQL no matter which application accesses
the database. In the case of any other table type, phpMyAdmin enforces the
relations internally and those relations are not applied to any other
In order to get it working, you first have to properly create the
[[pmadb|pmadb]]. Once that is setup, select a table's "Structure" page. Below
the table definition, a link called "Relation view" is shown. If you click that
link, a page will be shown that offers you to create a link to another table
for any (most) fields. Only PRIMARY KEYS are shown there, so if the field you
are referring to is not shown, you most likely are doing something wrong. The
drop-down at the bottom is the field which will be used as the name for a
.. image:: images/pma-relations-relation-view-link.png