I've got two tables:

CREATE TABLE events (
    event_id    INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
    tag_fk      INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES tags (tag_id),
    place_fk    INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES places (place_id),
    event_date  CHAR(18) NOT NULL DEFAULT '000000003000000001',
    sort_date   DATE NOT NULL DEFAULT '40041024BC',
    event_note  TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT ''
);

CREATE TABLE participants (
    person_fk   INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES persons (person_id),
    event_fk    INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES events (event_id) ON DELETE 
CASCADE,
    is_principal BOOLEAN NOT NULL DEFAULT false,
    PRIMARY KEY (person_fk, event_fk)
);

The table "participants" is of course a many-to-many relation 
between "events" and "persons". My problem is that it's entirely 
possible to insert eg. multiple birth events for one person, and I'd 
like to be able to spot these.

I've made this function that will return a birth date, but it will of 
course be somewhat undefined in case of multiple events (tag_fk 
2=birth, 62=stillbirth, 1035="guesstimated" birth).

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_pbdate(INTEGER) RETURNS TEXT AS $$
DECLARE
    pb_date TEXT;
BEGIN
    SELECT event_date INTO pb_date FROM events, participants
    WHERE events.event_id = participants.event_fk
        AND participants.person_fk = $1
        AND events.tag_fk in (2,62,1035)
        AND participants.is_principal IS TRUE;
    RETURN COALESCE(pb_date,'000000003000000001');
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

The originating database had a field for "primary" event, along with 
some business logic for deciding between multiple events of the same 
type, but I don't want to maintain something like that. I'll rather run 
a report spotting persons with multiple birth events. Any ideas?
-- 
Leif Biberg Kristensen | Registered Linux User #338009
http://solumslekt.org/ | Cruising with Gentoo/KDE

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