I got it to work by using the form: ALTER TABLE tablename DROP CONSTRAINT constraint name; No reference to FOREIGN KEY, just use the constraint name. On Friday 20 February 2004 08:04 am, tibor wrote: > I forgot to mention that I have tried numerous variations. > The one quoted in the original mail was from "The Complete Reference" > series. I've also tried the one that the \h command suggests: > > ALTER TABLE PARENTS DROP CONSTRAINT FOREIGN KEY (TYPE) CASCADE; > > but all I got was: > > ERROR: syntax error at or near "foreign" at character 37 > > the DROP CONSTRAINT clause doesn't recognise either PRIMARY or FOREIGN KEY > option. (not implemented, I guess) > > On Friday 20 Feb 2004 16:42, you wrote: > > On Fri, 20 Feb 2004, Tibor wrote: > > > I am using PostgreSQL 7.4.1 (only through psql) > > > I know, that the command > > > > > > ALTER TABLE OFFICES > > > DROP PRIMARY KEY (CITY); > > > > > > and its foreign key equivalent: > > > > > > ALTER TABLE SALESREPS > > > DROP CONSTRAINT > > > FOREIGN KEY (REP_OFFICE) > > > REFERENCES OFFICES; > > > > > > don't work in PostgreSQL because they are not implemented. However, > > > isn't there another way of removing them? > > > > That's not the correct syntax for ALTER TABLE ... DROP CONSTRAINT. > > > > ALTER TABLE tablename DROP CONSTRAINT constraint_name [RESTRICT | > > CASCADE]
-- Adrian Klaver [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org