Re: 1 foreign key to 2 different tables? - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Ryan Riehle
Subject Re: 1 foreign key to 2 different tables?
Date
Msg-id 000001c42fbe$cbb6c0e0$0302a8c0@buildways
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: 1 foreign key to 2 different tables?  (Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to>)
Responses Re: 1 foreign key to 2 different tables?  ("Ryan Riehle" <rkr@buildways.com>)
List pgsql-general
Sorry; Arrows are going the wrong way (seems like that caused some
confusion).
Corrected:

  a                c              b
 +----------+    +---------+    +----------+
 | PriKey1  |<---| ForKey  |--->| PriKey2  |
 |          |    | Flag    |    |          |
 +----------+    +---------+    +----------+

Kind Regards,

  -Ryan Riehle
   http://www.buildways.com

-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-general-owner@postgresql.org
[mailto:pgsql-general-owner@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Bruno Wolff III
Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2004 4:18 PM
To: Ryan Riehle
Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] 1 foreign key to 2 different tables?


On Sat, May 01, 2004 at 14:51:14 -0400,
  Ryan Riehle <rkr@buildways.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a key structure like so:
>
>  a                c              b
> +----------+    +---------+    +----------+
> | PriKey1  |--->| ForKey  |<---| PriKey2  |
> |          |    | Flag    |    |          |
> +----------+    +---------+    +----------+
>
> ...where c.ForKey is a value from PriKey1 OR PriKey2, which are
> different values.  All fields have the same data type; a.PriKey1 and
> b.PriKey2 are sequences. How does one enfore referential integrity in
> this structure so that c.ForKey references a.PriKeya when Flag is True
> or references b.PriKey2 when Flag is False? Looked pretty hard through
> the lists and on Google last night with no luck :(

Your diagram seems to indicate something other than what you said. If c is
supposed to reference a or b from one field I don't think you will be able
to do that without writing your own triggers. If you can use two fields you
call use NULL in the one that isn't active and use constraints to make sure
exactly the one that is suppused to be nonNULL is.

If you really have a and b pointing to c, then duplicate flag and a and b
and use a combined foreign key reference of the primary key and the flag
into c. Use constraints to make sure the flag field is always true for a and
always false for b.

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