On 10/19/07, Gregory Stark <stark@enterprisedb.com> wrote:
> "Kynn Jones" <kynnjo@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION canonicalize( anyelement, anyelement )
> > RETURNS anyarray AS
> > $$
> > BEGIN
> > IF $1 < $2 THEN RETURN ARRAY[ $1, $2 ];
> > ELSE RETURN ARRAY[ $2, $1 ];
> > END IF;
> > END;
> > $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
>
> You need to add IMMUTABLE as well.
>
> > and this function works as expected, but when I try to use it in a
> > constraint I get the error:
> >
> > -> ALTER TABLE foo ADD CONSTRAINT foo_uniq_x_y UNIQUE(canonicalize(x,y));
> > ERROR: 42601: syntax error at or near "("
> > LINE 1: ...E foo ADD CONSTRAINT foo_uniq_x_y UNIQUE(canonicalize(x,y));
>
> What you need is:
>
> CREATE UNIQUE INDEX foo_uniq_x_y on foo (canonicalize(x,y));
Yep, that did the trick.
> > I found this puzzling; it's not clear to me why UNIQUE(UPPER(x)) is OK
> > syntax but not UNIQUE(my_function(x)).
>
> Really? It doesn't work for me in the ADD CONSTRAINT syntax.
My mistake, sorry. I was probably misremembering something I saw in a
CREATE INDEX statement.
Thanks!
kj