Milos Prudek wrote:
I have a serial autoincrement column called "idmember" in my main table (members). This serial column is a key to a second table. A row in "members" table corresponds to many rows in the second table.

My question is: is this the best practice?

Here's an example in Python:
conn=psycopg.connect(dbconnstr)
c=conn.cursor()
    # LOOP BEGINS HERE...
    Cmd = "INSERT INTO members ... VALUES (...);"
    c.execute(Cmd, Data)
    Cmd = "SELECT currval('members_idmember_seq') FROM members LIMIT 1;"

A simple "SELECT currval('members_idmember_seq');" will do it. The sequence isn't part of the table.


    c.execute(Cmd)
    idmember = c.fetchone()[0]
    Cmd = "INSERT INTO msg (idmember,txt) VALUES (%s,%s);"

Alternatively, you could rewrite this query:
"INSERT INO msg (idmember,txt) VALUES (currval('members_idmember_seq'), %s);"


--
  Richard Huxton
  Archonet Ltd

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