In this PostgreSQL post explains how to create, add, and drop unique constraints in PostgreSQL with syntax and examples.
A unique constraint is a single field or combination of fields that uniquely defines a record. Some of the fields can contain null values as long as the combination of values is unique.
Primary Key | Unique Constraint |
---|---|
None of the fields that are part of the primary key can contain a null value. | Some of the fields that are part of the unique constraint can contain null values as long as the combination of values is unique. |
The syntax for creating a unique constraint using a CREATE TABLE statement in PostgreSQL is:
CREATE TABLE table_name
(
column1 datatype [ NULL | NOT NULL ],
column2 datatype [ NULL | NOT NULL ],
...
CONSTRAINT constraint_name UNIQUE (uc_col1, uc_col2, ... uc_col_n)
);
The name of the table that you wish to create.
The columns that you wish to create in the table.
The name of the unique constraint.
The columns that make up the unique constraint.
Let's look at an example of how to create a unique constraint in PostgreSQL using the CREATE TABLE statement.
CREATE TABLE order_details
( order_detail_id integer CONSTRAINT order_details_pk PRIMARY KEY,
order_id integer NOT NULL,
order_date date,
quantity integer,
notes varchar(200),
CONSTRAINT order_unique UNIQUE (order_id) );
In this example, we've created a unique constraint on the order_details table called order_unique. It consists of only one field - the order_id field.
We could also create a unique constraint with more than one field as in the example below:
CREATE TABLE order_details
( order_detail_id integer CONSTRAINT order_details_pk PRIMARY KEY,
order_id integer NOT NULL,
order_date date,
quantity integer,
notes varchar(200), CONSTRAINT order_date_unique UNIQUE (order_id, order_date) );
The syntax for creating a unique constraint using an ALTER TABLE statement in PostgreSQL is:
ALTER TABLE table_name
ADD CONSTRAINT constraint_name UNIQUE (column1, column2, ... column_n);
The name of the table to modify. This is the table that you wish to add a unique constraint to.
The name of the unique constraint.
The columns that make up the unique constraint.
Let's look at an example of how to add a unique constraint to an existing table in PostgreSQL using the ALTER TABLE statement.
ALTER TABLE order_details
ADD CONSTRAINT order_unique UNIQUE (order_id);
In this example, we've created a unique constraint on the existing order_details table called order_unique. It consists of the field called order_id.
We could also create a unique constraint with more than one field as in the example below:
ALTER TABLE order_details
ADD CONSTRAINT order_date_unique UNIQUE (order_id, order_date);
The syntax for dropping a unique constraint in PostgreSQL is:
ALTER TABLE table_name
DROP CONSTRAINT constraint_name;
The name of the table to modify. This is the table that you wish to remove the unique constraint from.
The name of the unique constraint to remove.
Let's look at an example of how to remove a unique constraint from a table in PostgreSQL.
ALTER TABLE order_details
DROP CONSTRAINT order_unique;
In this example, we're dropping a unique constraint on the order_details table called order_unique.