Re: PRIMARY KEY on a *group* of columns imply that each column is NOT NULL?
От | Guy Rouillier |
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Тема | Re: PRIMARY KEY on a *group* of columns imply that each column is NOT NULL? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | CC1CF380F4D70844B01D45982E671B239E87C4@mtxexch01.add0.masergy.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | PRIMARY KEY on a *group* of columns imply that each column is NOT NULL? (Stephane Bortzmeyer <bortzmeyer@nic.fr>) |
Ответы |
Re: PRIMARY KEY on a *group* of columns imply that each column is NOT
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Список | pgsql-general |
Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote: > If I define a primary key: > > name TEXT NOT NULL, > address INET, > PRIMARY KEY(name, address) > > the definition (seen by \d) becomes: > > name | text | not null > address | inet | not null > > "address" is now not null, which I do not want. It seems unnecessary: > I just want the tuple (name, address) to be unique, which seems > possible even if some 'address' values are NULL. > > It does not appear to be documented in > http://www.postgresql.org/docs/7.4/interactive/ddl-constraints.html#AEN1 975. > Is there a workaround? Per the SQL Commands Reference, under CREATE TABLE: "The primary key constraint specifies that a column or columns of a table may contain only unique (non-duplicate), nonnull values. Technically, PRIMARY KEY is merely a combination of UNIQUE and NOT NULL" Primary key columns cannot contain null values. -- Guy Rouillier
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