Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
> If I define a primary key:
> 
>        name TEXT NOT NULL,
>        address INET,
>        PRIMARY KEY(name, address)
> 
> the definition (seen by \d) becomes:
> 
>  name          | text                        | not null
>  address       | inet                        | not null
> 
> "address" is now not null, which I do not want. It seems unnecessary:
> I just want the tuple (name, address) to be unique, which seems
> possible even if some 'address' values are NULL.  
> 
> It does not appear to be documented in
>
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/7.4/interactive/ddl-constraints.html#AEN1
975.
> Is there a workaround?

Per the SQL Commands Reference, under CREATE TABLE:

"The primary key constraint specifies that a column or columns of a
table may contain only unique (non-duplicate), nonnull values.
Technically, PRIMARY KEY is merely a combination of UNIQUE and NOT NULL"

Primary key columns cannot contain null values.

-- 
Guy Rouillier


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