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I noticed that I can have NULL values in columns that have the UNIQUE constraint: UNIQUE(col)
Would that generate any issues in certain situations?
While the following addresses multiple null values, it does not address any "issues" associated with such a design, other than possible database/SQL portability - as such, it should probably not be considered an answer, and is left here merely for reference.
This is actually covered in the SQLite FAQ. It is a design choice - SQLite (unlike SQL Server) chose that multiple NULL values do not count towards uniqueness in an index.
The SQL standard requires that a UNIQUE constraint be enforced even if one or more of the columns in the constraint are NULL, but SQLite does not do this. Isn't that a bug?
Perhaps you are referring to the following statement from SQL92:
- A unique constraint is satisfied if and only if no two rows in a table have the same non-null values in the unique columns.
That statement is ambiguous, having at least two possible interpretations:
A unique constraint is satisfied if and only if no two rows in a table have the same values and have non-null values in the unique columns.
A unique constraint is satisfied if and only if no two rows in a table have the same values in the subset of unique columns that are not null.
SQLite follows interpretation (1), as does PostgreSQL, MySQL, Oracle, and Firebird. It is true that Informix and Microsoft SQL Server use interpretation (2), however we the SQLite developers hold that interpretation (1) is the most natural reading of the requirement and we also want to maximize compatibility with other SQL database engines, and most other database engines also go with (1), so that is what SQLite does.
See a comparison of NULL handling.
You can create 2 triggers on table to check if a row with column as null exists before any insert or update operation, if so raise exception.
CREATE TRIGGER UniqueColumnCheckNullInsert
BEFORE INSERT
ON 'Tablename'
WHEN NEW.'column_name' IS NULL
BEGIN
SELECT CASE WHEN((
SELECT 1
FROM 'Tablename'
WHERE 'column_name' IS NULL
)
NOTNULL) THEN RAISE(ABORT, "error row exists") END;
END;
CREATE TRIGGER UniqueColumnCheckNullUpdate
BEFORE UPDATE
ON 'Tablename'
WHEN NEW.'column_name' IS NULL
BEGIN
SELECT CASE WHEN((
SELECT 1
FROM 'Tablename'
WHERE 'column_name' IS NULL
)
NOTNULL) THEN RAISE(ABORT, "error row exists") END;
END;
If you want your unique index to throw an error when a two rows would be the same if you disregard NULL columns (and don't want to use triggers from Satyam's answer) you can do something like this
CREATE TABLE `test` (
`Field1` INTEGER,
`Field2` INTEGER
);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX `ix` ON `test` (
`Field1`,
`Field2`
);
INSERT INTO `test`(`Field1`,`Field2`) VALUES (1,NULL);
INSERT INTO `test`(`Field1`,`Field2`) VALUES (1,NULL); -- This shouldn't be allowed
DROP INDEX IF EXISTS `ix`;
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX `ix2` ON `test` (
`Field1`,
ifnull(`Field2`, 0) --use this instead
); --will fail