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290 lines
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ReStructuredText
290 lines
23 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _table_dialog:
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****************
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The Table Dialog
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****************
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Use the *Table* dialog to create or modify a table.
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The *Table* dialog organizes the development of a table through the following dialog tabs: *General*, *Columns*, *Constraints*, *Advanced*, *Parameter*, and *Security*. The *SQL* tab displays the SQL code generated by dialog selections.
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.. image:: images/table_general.png
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Use the fields in the *General* tab to identify the table:
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* Use the *Name* field to add a descriptive name for the table. A table cannot have the same name as any existing table, sequence, index, view, foreign table, or data type in the same schema. The name specified will be displayed in the *pgAdmin* tree control. This field is required.
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* Select the owner of the table from the drop-down listbox in the *Owner* field. By default, the owner of the table is the role that creates the table.
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* Select the name of the schema in which the table will reside from the drop-down listbox in the *Schema* field.
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* Use the drop-down listbox in the *Tablespace* field to specify the tablespace in which the table will be stored.
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* Store notes about the table in the *Comment* field.
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Click the *Columns* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/table_columns.png
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Use the drop-down listbox next to *Inherited from table(s)* to specify any parent table(s); the table will inherit columns from the selected parent table(s). Click inside the *Inherited from table(s)* field to select a table name from a drop-down list. Repeat to add any other parent tables. Delete a selected table by clicking the *x* to the left of the parent name. Note that inherited column names and datatypes are not editable in the current dialog; they must be modified at the parent level.
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Click the *Add* icon (+) to specify the names of columns and their datatypes in the *Columns* table:
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* Use the *Name* field to add a descriptive name for the column.
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* Use the drop-down listbox in the *Data type* field to select a data type for the column. This can include array specifiers. For more information on the data types supported by PostgreSQL, refer to Chapter 8 of the core documentation.
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* If enabled, use the *Length* and *Precision* fields to specify the maximum number of significant digits in a numeric value, or the maximum number of characters in a text value.
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* Move the *Not NULL?* switch to the *Yes* position to require a value in the column field.
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* Move the *Primary key?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the column is the primary key constraint.
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Click the *Add* icon (+) to add additional columns; to discard a column, click the trash icon to the left of the row and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
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Click the *Constraints* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/table_constraints.png
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Use the fields in the *Constraints* tab to provide a table or column constraint. Optional constraint clauses specify constraints (tests) that new or updated rows must satisfy for an *INSERT* or *UPDATE* operation to succeed. Select the appropriate constraint type by selecting one of the following tabs on the *Constraints* panel:
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+----------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Tab Name | Constraint |
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+================+=====================================================================================================================+
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| *Primary Key* | Provides a unique identifier for each row in the table. |
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+----------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| *Foreign Key* | Maintains referential integrity between two tables. |
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+----------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| *Check* | Requires data satisfies an expression or condition before insertion or modification. |
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+----------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| *Unique* | Ensures that the data contained in a column, or a group of columns, is unique among all the rows in the table. |
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+----------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| *Exclude* | Guarantees that if any two rows are compared on the specified column or expression (using the specified operator), |
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| | at least one of the operator comparisons will return false or null. |
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+----------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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To add a primary key for the table, select the *Primary Key* tab, and click the *Add* icon (+). To define the primary key, click the *Edit* icon to the left of the *Trash* icon. A dialog similar to the *Primary key* dialog (accessed by right clicking on *Constraints* in the *pgAdmin* tree control) opens.
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Use the fields in the *General* tab to identify the primary key:
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* Use the *Name* field to add a descriptive name for the primary key constraint. The name will be displayed in the *pgAdmin* tree control.
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* Provide notes about the primary key in the *Comment* field.
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Click the *Definition* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/primary_key_definition.png
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Use the fields in the *Definition* tab to define the primary key constraint:
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* Click inside the *Columns* field and select one or more column names from the drop-down listbox. To delete a selection, click the *x* to the left of the column name. The primary key constraint should be different from any unique constraint defined for the same table; the selected column(s) for the constraints must be distinct.
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* Select the name of the tablespace in which the primary key constraint will reside from the drop-down listbox in the *Tablespace* field.
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* Use the *Fill Factor* field to specify a fill factor for the table and index. The fill factor for a table is a percentage between 10 and 100. 100 (complete packing) is the default.
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* Move the *Deferrable?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferrable and can be postponed until the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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* If enabled, move the *Deferred?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferred to the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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.. image:: images/table_foreign_key.png
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To add a foreign key constraint, select the *Foreign Key* tab, and click the *Add* icon (+). To define the constraint, click the *Edit* icon to the left of the *Trash* icon. A dialog similar to the *Foreign key* dialog (accessed by right clicking on *Constraints* in the *pgAdmin* tree control) opens.
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Use the fields in the *General* tab to identify the foreign key constraint:
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* Use the *Name* field to add a descriptive name for the foreign key constraint. The name will be displayed in the *pgAdmin* tree control.
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* Provide notes about the foreign key in the *Comment* field.
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Click the *Definition* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/foreign_key_definition.png
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Use the fields in the *Definition* tab to define the foreign key constraint:
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* Move the *Deferrable?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferrable and can be postponed until the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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* If enabled, move the *Deferred?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferred to the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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* Move the *Match type* switch specify the type of matching that is enforced by the constraint:
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* Select *Full* to indicate that all columns of a multicolumn foreign key must be null if any column is null; if all columns are null, the row is not required to have a match in the referenced table.
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* Select *Simple* to specify that a single foreign key column may be null; if any column is null, the row is not required to have a match in the referenced table.
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* Move the *Validated* switch to the *Yes* position to instruct the server to validate the existing table content (against a foreign key or check constraint) when you save modifications to this dialog.
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* Move the *Auto FK Index* switch to the *No* position to disable the automatic index feature.
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* The field next to *Covering Index* generates the name of an index if the *Auto FK Index* switch is in the *Yes* position; or, this field is disabled.
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Click the *Columns* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/foreign_key_columns.png
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Use the fields in the *Columns* tab to specify one or more reference column(s). A Foreign Key constraint requires that one or more columns of a table must only contain values that match values in the referenced column(s) of a row of a referenced table:
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Local column* to specify the column in the current table that will be compared to the foreign table.
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *References* to specify the name of the table in which the comparison column(s) resides.
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Referencing* to specify a column in the foreign table.
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Click the *Add* icon (+) to add a column to the list; repeat the steps above and click the *Add* icon (+) to add additional columns. To discard an entry, click the trash icon to the left of the entry and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
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Click the *Action* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/foreign_key_action.png
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Use the drop-down listboxes on the *Action* tab to specify behavior related to the foreign key constraint that will be performed when data within the table is updated or deleted:
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *On update* to select an action that will be performed when data in the table is updated.
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *On delete* to select an action that will be performed when data in the table is deleted.
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The supported actions are:
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+-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| NO ACTION | Produce an error indicating that the deletion or update will create a foreign key constraint violation. |
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| | If the constraint is deferred, this error will be produced at constraint check time if any referencing |
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| | rows still exist. This is the default. |
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+-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| RESTRICT | Throw an error indicating that the deletion or update would create a foreign key constraint violation. |
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| | This is the same as NO ACTION except that the check is not deferrable. |
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+-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| CASCADE | Delete any rows referencing the deleted row, or update the values of the referencing column(s) to the new |
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| | values of the referenced columns, respectively. |
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+-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| SET NULL | Set the referencing column(s) to null. |
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+-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| SET DEFAULT | Set the referencing column(s) to their default values. There must be a row in the referenced table |
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| | that matches the default values (if they are not null), or the operation will fail. |
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+-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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.. image:: images/table_check.png
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To add a check constraint, select the *Check* tab on the panel, and click the *Add* icon (+). To define the check constraint, click the *Edit* icon to the left of the *Trash* icon. A dialog similar to the *Check* dialog (accessed by right clicking on *Constraints* in the *pgAdmin* tree control) opens.
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Use the fields in the *General* tab to identify the check constraint:
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* Use the *Name* field to add a descriptive name for the check constraint. The name will be displayed in the *pgAdmin* tree control. With PostgreSQL 9.5 forward, when a table has multiple check constraints, they will be tested for each row in alphabetical order by name and after NOT NULL constraints.
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* Provide notes about the check constraint in the *Comment* field.
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Click the *Definition* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/check_definition.png
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Use the fields in the *Definition* tab to define the check constraint:
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* Provide the expression that a row must satisfy in the *Check* field. This field is required.
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* Move the *No Inherit?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify this constraint is automatically inherited by a table's children. The default is *No*.
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* Move the *Don't validate?* switch to the *No* position to skip validation of existing data; the constraint may not hold for all rows in the table. The default is *Yes*.
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.. image:: images/table_unique.png
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To add a unique constraint, select the *Unique* tab on the panel, and click the *Add* icon (+). To define the constraint, click the *Edit* icon to the left of the *Trash* icon. A dialog similar to the *Unique constraint* dialog (accessed by right clicking on *Constraints* in the *pgAdmin* tree control) opens.
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Use the fields in the *General* tab to identify the unique constraint:
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* Use the *Name* field to add a descriptive name for the unique constraint. The name will be displayed in the *pgAdmin* tree control.
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* Provide notes about the unique constraint in the *Comment* field.
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Click the *Definition* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/unique_constraint_definition.png
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Use the fields in the *Definition* tab to define the unique constraint:
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* Click inside the *Columns* field and select one or more column names from the drop-down listbox. To delete a selection, click the *x* to the left of the column name. The unique constraint should be different from the primary key constraint defined for the same table; the selected column(s) for the constraints must be distinct.
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* Select the name of the tablespace in which the unique constraint will reside from the drop-down listbox in the *Tablespace* field.
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* Use the *Fill Factor* field to specify a fill factor for the table and index. The fill factor for a table is a percentage between 10 and 100. 100 (complete packing) is the default.
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* Move the *Deferrable?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferrable and can be postponed until the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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* If enabled, move the *Deferred?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferred to the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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.. image:: images/table_exclude.png
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To add an exclusion constraint, select the *Exclude* tab on the panel, and click the *Add* icon (+). To define the constraint, click the *Edit* icon to the left of the *Trash* icon. A dialog similar to the *Exclusion constraint* dialog (accessed by right clicking on *Constraints* in the *pgAdmin* tree control) opens.
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Use the fields in the *General* tab to identify the exclusion constraint:
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* Use the *Name* field to provide a descriptive name for the exclusion constraint. The name will be displayed in the *pgAdmin* tree control.
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* Provide notes about the exclusion constraint in the *Comment* field.
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Click the *Definition* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/exclusion_constraint_definition.png
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Use the fields in the *Definition* tab to define the exclusion constraint:
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Tablespace* to select the tablespace in which the index associated with the exclude constraint will reside.
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Access method* to specify the type of index that will be used when implementing the exclusion constraint:
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* Select *gist* to specify a GiST index (the default).
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* Select *spgist* to specify a space-partitioned GiST index.
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* Select *btree* to specify a B-tree index.
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* Select *hash* to specify a hash index.
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* Use the *Fill Factor* field to specify a fill factor for the table and associated index. The fill factor is a percentage between 10 and 100. 100 (complete packing) is the default.
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* Move the *Deferrable?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify that the timing of the constraint is deferrable, and can be postponed until the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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* If enabled, move the *Deferred?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify the timing of the constraint is deferred to the end of the statement. The default is *No*.
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* Use the *Constraint* field to provide a condition that a row must satisfy to be included in the table.
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Click the *Columns* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/exclusion_constraint_columns.png
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Use the fields in the *Columns* tab to to specify the column(s) to which the constraint applies. Use the drop-down listbox next to *Column* to select a column and click the *Add* icon (+) to provide details of the action on the column:
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* The *Column* field is populated with the selection made in the *Column* drop-down listbox.
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* If applicable, use the drop-down listbox in the *Operator class* to specify the operator class that will be used by the index for the column.
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* Move the *DESC* switch to *DESC* to specify a descending sort order. The default is *ASC* which specifies an ascending sort order.
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* Move the *NULLs order* switch to *LAST* to define an ascending sort order for NULLs. The default is *FIRST* which specifies a descending order.
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* Use the drop-down list next to *Operator* to specify a comparison or conditional operator.
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Click the *Advanced* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/table_advanced.png
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Use the fields in the *Advanced* tab to define advanced features for the table:
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Of type* to copy the table structure from the specified composite type. Please note that a typed table will be dropped if the type is dropped (with DROP TYPE ... CASCADE).
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* Use the *Fill Factor* field to specify a fill factor for the table. The fill factor for a table is a percentage between 10 and 100. 100 (complete packing) is the default.
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* Move the *Has OIDs?* switch to the *Yes* position to specify that each row within a table has a system-assigned object identifier. The default is *No*.
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* Move the *Unlogged?* switch to the *Yes* position to disable logging for the table. Data written to an unlogged table is not written to the write-ahead log. Any indexes created on an unlogged table are automatically unlogged as well. The default is *No*.
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Use the fields in the **Like** box to specify which attributes of an existing table from which a table will automatically copy column names, data types, and not-null constraints; after saving the new or modified table, any changes to the original table will not be applied to the new table.
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* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Relation* to select a reference table.
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* Move the *With default values?* switch to the *Yes* position to copy default values.
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* Move the *With constraints?* switch to the *Yes* position to copy table and column constraints.
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* Move the *With indexes?* switch to the *Yes* position to copy indexes.
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* Move the *With storage?* switch to the *Yes* position to copy storage settings.
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* Move the *With comments?* switch to the *Yes* position to copy comments.
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Click the *Parameter* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/table_parameter.png
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Use the tabs nested inside the *Parameter* tab to specify VACUUM and ANALYZE thresholds; use the *Table* tab and the *Toast Table* tab to customize values for the table and the associated toast table:
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* Move the *Custom auto-vacuum?* switch to the *Yes* position to perform custom maintenance on the table.
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* Move the *Enabled?* switch to the *Yes* position to select values in the *Vacuum table*. The *Vacuum Table* provides default values for maintenance operations.
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Provide a custom value in the *Value* column for each metric listed in the *Label* column.
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Click the *Security* tab to continue.
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.. image:: images/table_security.png
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Use the *Security* tab to assign privileges and define security labels.
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Use the *Privileges* panel to assign privileges to a role. Click the *Add* icon (+) to set privileges for database objects:
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* Select the name of the role from the drop-down listbox in the *Grantee* field.
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* Click inside the *Privileges* field. Check the boxes to the left of one or more privileges to grant the selected privilege to the specified user.
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* Select the name of the role from the drop-down listbox in the *Grantor* field. The default grantor is the owner of the database.
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Click the *Add* icon (+) to assign additional privileges; to discard a privilege, click the trash icon to the left of the row and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
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Use the *Security Labels* panel to define security labels applied to the function. Click the *Add* icon (+) to add each security label selection:
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* Specify a security label provider in the *Provider* field. The named provider must be loaded and must consent to the proposed labeling operation.
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* Specify a a security label in the *Security Label* field. The meaning of a given label is at the discretion of the label provider. PostgreSQL places no restrictions on whether or how a label provider must interpret security labels; it merely provides a mechanism for storing them.
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Click the *Add* icon (+) to assign additional security labels; to discard a security label, click the trash icon to the left of the row and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
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Click the *SQL* tab to continue.
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Your entries in the *Table* dialog generate a SQL command (see an example below). Use the *SQL* tab for review; revisit or switch tabs to make any changes to the SQL command.
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**Example**
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The following is an example of the sql command generated by user selections in the *Table* dialog:
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.. image:: images/table_sql.png
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The example shown demonstrates creating a table named *product_category*. It has three columns and a primary key constraint on the *category_id* column.
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* Click the *Info* button (i) to access online help. View context-sensitive help in the *Tabbed browser*, where a new tab displays the PostgreSQL core documentation.
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* Click the *Save* button to save work.
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* Click the *Cancel* button to exit without saving work.
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* Click the *Reset* button to restore configuration parameters. |