Re: Address Table
От | Rudi Starcevic |
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Тема | Re: Address Table |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 3EFB8F2B.4040800@oasis.net.au обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Address Table (Nabil Sayegh <postgresql@e-trolley.de>) |
Ответы |
Re: Address Table
|
Список | pgsql-novice |
Hi,
Just one other thing.
With the senario below it's possible to have addresses without a link to any Park.
Say if I remove a Park then it's row in the parks_address table still exists.
I guess I just need to write a script to look for lonely addresses ?
Does that sound OK ?
Cheers
Rudi.
Nabil Sayegh wrote:
Just one other thing.
With the senario below it's possible to have addresses without a link to any Park.
Say if I remove a Park then it's row in the parks_address table still exists.
I guess I just need to write a script to look for lonely addresses ?
Does that sound OK ?
Cheers
Rudi.
Nabil Sayegh wrote:
Am Fre, 2003-06-27 um 01.08 schrieb Rudi Starcevic:If each Parks has *one and one only* address is it better to store the address in the parks_table or build another table just for Parks addresses - parks_address ?1. more than 1 park can be at 1 address 2. name of a street can change over time => 2nd table for addressesIf I have two tables would you put the parks_table primary key in the parks_address table or the other way round ie. the parks_address primary key in the parks_table ?same like above, many parks can be at the same location. parks_table 'gets the PRIMARY KEY' from parks_address We speak of a so called "FOREIGN KEY" and it "REFERENCES" parks_address. e.g.: CREATE TABLE parks_address (id_parks_address SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,address text NOT NULL ); CREATE TABLE parks_table (id_parks_table SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,id_parks_address INT REFERENCES parks_address NOT NULL,park_name text NOT NULL ); INSERT INTO parks_address (address) VALUES ('foo street'); INSERT INTO parks_address (address) VALUES ('bar street'); INSERT INTO parks_table (id_parks_address, park_name) VALUES (1, 'A Park in foo'); INSERT INTO parks_table (id_parks_address, park_name) VALUES (1, 'Another Park in foo'); INSERT INTO parks_table (id_parks_address, park_name) VALUES (2, 'A Park in bar'); If you want to DELETE all parks automatically when an address no longer exists (e.g. an earthquake :) then you should write REFERENCES parks_address ON DELETE CASCADE NOT NULL instead. If you mean, it's impossible for an address to disappear suddenly :) then you could write: REFERENCES parks_address ON DELETE RESTRICT NOT NULL AFAIK this is the default. HTH
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