Ferindo Middleton Jr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I have the following table:
> CREATE TABLE gyuktnine ( > id SERIAL, > intsystem INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES yuksystems(id) CONSTRAINT > int_cannot_equal_ext > CHECK (intsystem != extsystem), > extsystem INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES yuksystems(id) CONSTRAINT > ext_cannot_equal_int > CHECK (extsystem != intsystem), > PRIMARY KEY (intsystem, extsystem) > ); > Is this redundant? Yes. I think it's poor style too: a constraint referencing multiple columns should be written as a table constraint not a column constraint. That is, you ought to write CREATE TABLE gyuktnine ( id SERIAL, intsystem INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES yuksystems(id), extsystem INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES yuksystems(id), PRIMARY KEY (intsystem, extsystem), CONSTRAINT int_cannot_equal_ext CHECK (intsystem != extsystem) ); At least in the earlier versions of the SQL standard, it was actually illegal for a column constraint to reference any other columns. I'm not sure if that's still true in the latest spec. Postgres treats column constraints and table constraints alike, but other SQL databases are likely to be pickier. BTW, is there any actual need for the "id" column here, seeing that you have a natural primary key? regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match