I'm going for Merlin's solution. Its the easiest one :P

But I'm also having a problem:

SELECT column_name FROM information_schema.key_column_usage k
    LEFT OUTER JOIN information_schema.table_constraints ON (k.table_name =
table_constraints.table_name)
WHERE
        table_constraints.constraint_type = 'PRIMARY KEY'
        AND k.table_name = 'acidentes'
        AND k.table_schema = 'public'

this still returns me multiple columns. Did I forgot something?

2010/8/3 Devrim GÜNDÜZ <dev...@gunduz.org>

> On Tue, 2010-08-03 at 16:13 -0300, George Silva wrote:
> > I'm building a function which needs to know what is the primary key of
> > a
> > certain table (all in pgplsql).
> >
> > I was using select * from information_schema.key_column_usage where
> > table_schema='foo' and table_name = 'aaa'; but that will give me
> > multiple
> > results in case of additional keys in the table.
> >
> > Any suggestions?
>
> See pg_index.indisprimary column. If it is true, then the it is the PK
> of given table.
>
> Regards,
> --
> Devrim GÜNDÜZ
> PostgreSQL Danışmanı/Consultant, Red Hat Certified Engineer
> PostgreSQL RPM Repository: http://yum.pgrpms.org
> Community: devrim~PostgreSQL.org, devrim.gunduz~linux.org.tr
> http://www.gunduz.org  Twitter: http://twitter.com/devrimgunduz
>



-- 
George R. C. Silva

Desenvolvimento em GIS
http://blog.geoprocessamento.net

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