On Tuesday 06 April 2004 17:38, Robert Treat wrote: > On Tue, 2004-04-06 at 11:17, Tom Lane wrote: > > Robert Treat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > Trying to come up with the proper syntax to meet the following > > > criteria: create table foo (bar integer, baz boolean UNIQUE (bar, baz = > > > true)); > > > > The correct way to do it is with a separate CREATE INDEX command: > > I think I had initially abandoned looking at that type of solution after > having run across this paragraph in the docs while looking for the > proper constraint syntax: > > "Note: The preferred way to add a unique constraint to a table is ALTER > TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT. The use of indexes to enforce unique > constraints could be considered an implementation detail that should not > be accessed directly." > > The subliminal mind is a powerful force eh? Perhaps that paragraph > should be modified... but I'm not sure if it should expanded to include > thoughts along the lines of Stephan's response or maybe just drop the > "should not be accessed directly" bit...
Anyone know if there is any way to do this in one of the later SQL standards? The CREATE INDEX thing is a bit of a hack, and I certainly wouldn't have thought of it either. -- Richard Huxton Archonet Ltd ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org