Bruce Momjian <br...@momjian.us> writes: > On Thu, Aug 9, 2018 at 01:11:05PM +0300, KES wrote: >> Why surprising? It is >> [documented](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-create >> table.html#sql-createtable-exclude): >>> If all of the specified operators test for equality, this is >>> equivalent to a UNIQUE constraint, although an ordinary unique >>> constraint will be faster.
>> Thus the UNIQUE constraint is just particular case of exclusion >> constraint, is not? > Well, for me a UNIQUE constraint guarantees each discrete value is > unique, while exclusion constraint says discrete or ranges or geometric > types don't overlap. I realize equality is a special case of discrete, > but having such cases be marked as UNIQUE seems too confusing. I think the OP is reading "equivalent" literally, as meaning that an EXCLUDE with operators that act like equality is treated as being the same as UNIQUE for *every* purpose. We're not going there, IMO, so probably we need to tweak the doc wording a little. Perhaps writing "functionally equivalent" would be better? Or instead of "is equivalent to", write "imposes the same restriction as"? regards, tom lane