Doc: add an example of a self-referential foreign key to ddl.sgml.

While we've always allowed such cases, the documentation didn't
say you could do it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/161969805833.690.13680986983883602407@wrigleys.postgresql.org
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2021-04-30 15:37:56 -04:00
parent 386e64ea5a
commit e6f9539dc3
1 changed files with 26 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -915,6 +915,11 @@ CREATE TABLE orders (
referenced table is used as the referenced column(s).
</para>
<para>
You can assign your own name for a foreign key constraint,
in the usual way.
</para>
<para>
A foreign key can also constrain and reference a group of columns.
As usual, it then needs to be written in table constraint form.
@ -931,9 +936,28 @@ CREATE TABLE t1 (
match the number and type of the referenced columns.
</para>
<indexterm>
<primary>foreign key</primary>
<secondary>self-referential</secondary>
</indexterm>
<para>
You can assign your own name for a foreign key constraint,
in the usual way.
Sometimes it is useful for the <quote>other table</quote> of a
foreign key constraint to be the same table; this is called
a <firstterm>self-referential</firstterm> foreign key. For
example, if you want rows of a table to represent nodes of a tree
structure, you could write
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE tree (
node_id integer PRIMARY KEY,
parent_id integer REFERENCES tree,
name text,
...
);
</programlisting>
A top-level node would have NULL <structfield>parent_id</structfield>,
but non-NULL <structfield>parent_id</structfield> entries would be
constrained to reference valid rows of the table.
</para>
<para>