On Sun, 10 Jun 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> 
> > > I was just creating this little database for demonstrating the use of
> > > foreign keys constraints.
> > > 
> > > I was about the create 3 tables, namely mother, father and child. Mother has
> > > a foreign key pointing at father ( id ), and father has a foreign key
> > > pointing at mother ( id ). Child has one pointer to mother ( id ) and one
> > > pointer to father ( id ). How can I prevent the error message from occurring?
> > 
> > You don't put the constraint at table creation time.  The table referenced
> > by the references has to exist.  Use ALTER TABLE to add the constraint
> > after creating table father.
> > 
> 
> I tried:
> 
> BEGIN;
> SET CONSTRAINTS ALL DEFERRED;
> INSERT INTO mother (fatherID, name) VALUES ( 1, 'mamma' ) ;
> INSERT INTO father (motherID, name) VALUES ( 1, 'pappa' ) ;
> INSERT INTO child (motherID, fatherID, name) VALUES (1, 1, 'barn 1') ;
> INSERT INTO child (motherID, fatherID, name) VALUES (1, 1, 'barn 2') ;
> COMMIT;
>  
> ...which did not work. Still it complains about key referenced from mother not
> found in father.

Ah, that's because you didn't define the constraints DEFERRABLE.  SET
CONSTRAINTS ALL DEFERRED only changes the state of deferrable constraints.

If you don't specify a time, it's INITIALLY IMMEDIATE.  If it's initially
immediate, it's NOT DEFERRABLE unless DEFERRABLE is explicitly given.


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