I have a table with this layout:
CREATE TABLE Favorites
(
FavoriteId uuid NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
UserId uuid NOT NULL,
RecipeId uuid NOT NULL,
MenuId uuid
)
I want to create a unique constraint similar to this:
ALTER TABLE Favorites
ADD CONSTRAINT Favorites_UniqueFavorite UNIQUE(UserId, MenuId, RecipeId);
However, this will allow multiple rows with the same (UserId, RecipeId)
, if MenuId IS NULL
. I want to allow NULL
in MenuId
to store a favorite that has no associated menu, but I only want at most one of these rows per user/recipe pair.
The ideas I have so far are:
Use some hard-coded UUID (such as all zeros) instead of null.
However, MenuId
has a FK constraint on each user's menus, so I'd then have to create a special "null" menu for every user which is a hassle.
Check for existence of a null entry using a trigger instead.
I think this is a hassle and I like avoiding triggers wherever possible. Plus, I don't trust them to guarantee my data is never in a bad state.
Just forget about it and check for the previous existence of a null entry in the middle-ware or in a insert function, and don't have this constraint.
I'm using Postgres 9.0.
Is there any method I'm overlooking?
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