On 20 Jul 2010, at 16:19, Gauthier, Dave wrote:

> Hi Everyone:
>  
> v8.3.4 on Linux
>  
> I need to revamp the way I've done check constraints on a table. This is an 
> example of the sort of thing I've done...
>  
> create table foo (
>   col1 text,
>   col2 text,
>   constraint c1_constr check (col1 in ('yes','no')),
>   constraint c2_constr check (validate_c2(col2) = 'OK')
>   );
>  
> ...with validate_c2 having been declared...
>  
> create or replace function validate_c2 (text) returns text as $$
>   declare
>     c2_csv alias for $1;
>     c2_lst text[];
>     x int;
>   begin
>     c2_lst = string_to_array(c2_csv,',');
>    
>     for x in array_lower(c2_lst,1).. array_upper(c2_lst,1)
>       loop
>         if c2_lst[x] not in ('red','orange','yellow','green','blue','violet')
>           then return 'NO';  end if;
>       end loop;   
>  
>     return 'OK';
>  
>   end;
> $$ language plpgsql ;
>  
>  
> As you can see, the constraint on col1 is a simple check that the value is in 
> a list.  But the constraint on col2 needs to check that each element in a csv 
> is in a list.
>  
> I'd like to have one table that contains all the valid values for both column 
> constraints and perhaps use a more sophisticated approach to this than the 
> check constraints and plpgsql you see above. 


I think your best bet would be to define an ENUM type with those values and 
store the CSV data as an array of that type. I think it would automatically 
reject any invalid values that way.

A foreign key constraint would be nicer to have, but I don't see any 
straightforward way to unnest your CSV data in such a way that you could apply 
one to it.


Alban Hertroys

--
Screwing up is an excellent way to attach something to the ceiling.


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