On Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 05:03:33PM -0500, Robert Haas wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 4:47 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
> >
> > Spelling out "primary key" would seem to be more in keeping with existing
> > entries in that column, eg we have "not null" not "NN".
> >
> > I think this is a sensible proposal for a single-column PK, but am less
> > sure that it makes sense for multi-col. The modifiers column is
> > intended to describe column constraints; which a multi-col PK is not,
> > by definition.
>
> Yeah, IIRC, MySQL shows PRI for each column of a multi-column primary
> key, and I think it's horribly confusing. I wouldn't even be in favor
> of doing this just for the single-column case, on the grounds that it
> makes the single and multiple column cases asymmetrical. IMO, the \d
> output has too many bells and whistles already; the last thing we
> should do is add more.
How about spelling it as so:
Table "public.test" Column | Type | Modifiers--------+---------+----------- a | integer | primary key b
|integer | Indexes: "test1_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (a)
Table "public.test2" Column | Type | Modifiers--------+---------+----------- a | integer | primary key
(compound) b | integer | primary key (compound)Indexes: "test2_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (a, b)
As to Tom's point that a compound primary key is a table level
restriction, by definition, participating in such a key is still a
restriction on what values that column can take. When introspecting
someone else's schema, with a very wide table, seeing '(compound)'
is a nice strong hint to go looking for the other members of the PK.
Ross
--
Ross Reedstrom, Ph.D. reedstrm@rice.edu
Systems Engineer & Admin, Research Scientist phone: 713-348-6166
The Connexions Project http://cnx.org fax: 713-348-3665
Rice University MS-375, Houston, TX 77005
GPG Key fingerprint = F023 82C8 9B0E 2CC6 0D8E F888 D3AE 810E 88F0 BEDE