| PostgreSQL 8.2.23 Documentation | ||||
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Recall the weather and
  cities tables from Chapter 2. Consider the following
  problem: You want to make sure that no one can insert rows in the
  weather table that do not have a
  matching entry in the cities
  table. This is called maintaining the referential integrity of your data. In simplistic
  database systems this would be implemented (if at all) by first
  looking at the cities table to
  check if a matching record exists, and then inserting or
  rejecting the new weather records.
  This approach has a number of problems and is very inconvenient,
  so PostgreSQL can do this for
  you.
The new declaration of the tables would look like this:
CREATE TABLE cities (
        city     varchar(80) primary key,
        location point
);
CREATE TABLE weather (
        city      varchar(80) references cities(city),
        temp_lo   int,
        temp_hi   int,
        prcp      real,
        date      date
);
  Now try inserting an invalid record:
INSERT INTO weather VALUES ('Berkeley', 45, 53, 0.0, '1994-11-28');
  ERROR: insert or update on table "weather" violates foreign key constraint "weather_city_fkey" DETAIL: Key (city)=(Berkeley) is not present in table "cities".
The behavior of foreign keys can be finely tuned to your application. We will not go beyond this simple example in this tutorial, but just refer you to Chapter 5 for more information. Making correct use of foreign keys will definitely improve the quality of your database applications, so you are strongly encouraged to learn about them.