Tom et al.
Discovered this quirk in foriegn keys:
In the preliminary version of a database, I added foriegn
key constraints to a number of tables, linking them to a
column in a shared reference table (status.status) that was
only one-half of a composite primary key (and thus the
values were not unique). When I tried to delete a row
containing a "2" in the status column from the status
relation, I received a Foreign Key violation error event
though there were other "2"'s in the table still present.
So ... is this a bug in forign key implementation, or just
my fault for keying off a non-unique value?
And, if the latter, is there a way I can construct a foreign
key constraint that keys onto a view or query?
Grazie!
-Josh Berkus
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Josh Berkus
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