I'm trying to create a table that would enforce a unique combination of two columns of the same type - in both directions. E.g. this would be illegal:
col1 col2
1 2
2 1
I have come up with this, but it doesn't work:
database=> d+ friend;
Table "public.friend"
Column | Type | Modifiers | Storage | Stats target | Description
--------------+--------------------------+-----------+----------+--------------+-------------
user_id_from | text | not null | extended | |
user_id_to | text | not null | extended | |
status | text | not null | extended | |
sent | timestamp with time zone | not null | plain | |
updated | timestamp with time zone | | plain | |
Indexes:
"friend_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (user_id_from, user_id_to)
"friend_user_id_to_user_id_from_key" UNIQUE CONSTRAINT, btree (user_id_to, user_id_from)
Foreign-key constraints:
"friend_status_fkey" FOREIGN KEY (status) REFERENCES friend_status(name)
"friend_user_id_from_fkey" FOREIGN KEY (user_id_from) REFERENCES user_account(login)
"friend_user_id_to_fkey" FOREIGN KEY (user_id_to) REFERENCES user_account(login)
Has OIDs: no
Is it possible to write this without triggers or any advanced magic, using constraints only?
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