Hi all; Here is a brief guide to NULL's and Referential Integrity:
NULL is a special SQL value meaning 'unknown.' Well, it is a little more complicated and NULL can mean "value does not exist." Therefore X = NULL is NULL becuase we don't know if the NULL is equal to X. So: NULL does not equal NULL NULL does not equal anything else. NULL does not equal an empty string You get the picture. Think of it this way: 2 non-existant or unknown values don't equal any other existant or non-existant value, known or unknown. Now, referential integrity is defined as follows: For every non-NULL foreign key, there is a corresponding primary key in the referenced table. Note that NULL's are specifically handled in the RI definition. When do I use NULL's? NULL's have a few uses: 1: To indicate that the foreign key does NOT correspond with a primary key in the referencing table. In this case, NULL means something like "value does not exist" (this is not the same as an empty value). In an employee's table, a NULL in the manager's field would mean "Employee does not report to any other employee as a manager." 2: To indicate that the value probably exists, but is unknown at present (we don't know this customer's address, so we set it to NULL). Best Wishes, Chris Travers ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org