问题
I believe the title is self-explanatory. How do you create the table structure in PostgreSQL to make a many-to-many relationship.
My example:
Product(name, price);
Bill(name, date, Products);
回答1:
The SQL DDL (data definition language) statements could look like this:
CREATE TABLE product (
product_id serial PRIMARY KEY -- implicit primary key constraint
, product text NOT NULL
, price numeric NOT NULL DEFAULT 0
);
CREATE TABLE bill (
bill_id serial PRIMARY KEY
, bill text NOT NULL
, billdate date NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_DATE
);
CREATE TABLE bill_product (
bill_id int REFERENCES bill (bill_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
, product_id int REFERENCES product (product_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE
, amount numeric NOT NULL DEFAULT 1
, CONSTRAINT bill_product_pkey PRIMARY KEY (bill_id, product_id) -- explicit pk
);
I made a few adjustments:
The n:m relationship is normally implemented by a separate table -
bill_productin this case.I added serial columns as surrogate primary keys. I highly recommend that, because the name of a product is hardly unique. Also, enforcing uniqueness and referencing the column in foreign keys is much cheaper with a 4-byte
integerthan with a string stored astextorvarchar.
In Postgres 10 or later consider an IDENTITY column instead. Details:- https://blog.2ndquadrant.com/postgresql-10-identity-columns/
Don't use names of basic data types like
dateas identifiers. While this is possible, it is bad style and leads to confusing errors and error messages. Use legal, lower case, unquoted identifiers. Never use reserved words and avoid double-quoted mixed case identifiers if you can.nameis not a good name. I renamed thenamecolumn of the tableproductto beproduct. That is a better naming convention. Otherwise, when you join a couple of tables in a query - which you do a lot in a relational database - you end up with multiple columns namednameand have to use column aliases to sort out the mess. That's not helpful. Another widespread anti-pattern would be justidas column name.
I am not sure what the name of abillwould be. Maybebill_idcan be the name in this case.priceis of data typenumericto store fractional numbers precisely as entered (arbitrary precision type instead of floating point type). If you deal with whole numbers exclusively, make thatinteger. For example, you could save prices as Cents.The
amount("Products"in your question) goes into the linking tablebill_productand is of typenumericas well. Again,integerif you deal with whole numbers exclusively.You see the foreign keys in
bill_product? I created both to cascade changes (ON UPDATE CASCADE): If aproduct_idorbill_idshould change, the change is cascaded to all depending entries inbill_productand nothing breaks.
I also usedON DELETE CASCADEforbill_id: If you delete a bill, the details are deleted with it.
Not so for products: You don't want to delete a product that's used in a bill. Postgres will throw an error if you attempt this. You would add another column toproductto mark obsolete rows instead.All columns in this basic example end up to be
NOT NULL, soNULLvalues are not allowed. (Yes, all columns - columns used in a primary key are definedUNIQUE NOT NULLautomatically.) That's becauseNULLvalues wouldn't make sense in any of the columns. It makes a beginner's life easier. But you won't get away so easily, you need to understand NULL handling anyway. Additional columns might allowNULLvalues, functions and joins can introduceNULLvalues in queries etc.Read the chapter on CREATE TABLE in the manual.
Primary keys are implemented with a unique index on the key columns, that makes queries with conditions on the PK column(s) fast. However, the sequence of key columns is relevant in multicolumn keys. Since the PK on
bill_productis on(bill_id, product_id)in my example, you may want to add another index on justproduct_idor(product_id, bill_id)if you have queries looking for given aproduct_idand nobill_id. Details:- PostgreSQL composite primary key
- Is a composite index also good for queries on the first field?
- Working of indexes in PostgreSQL
Read the chapter on indexes in the manual.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9789736/how-to-implement-a-many-to-many-relationship-in-postgresql