Brent Wood DBA/GIS consultant NIWA, Wellington New Zealand >>> Jorge Godoy <jgodoy@xxxxxxxxx> 09/17/08 1:36 AM >>> Em Monday 15 September 2008 19:05:25 pcreso@xxxxxxxxxx escreveu: > Hi, > > I need a foreign key (or equivalent) where the referenced table cannot have > a unique constraint. > > For fisheries surveys we have a table of catch records. For a given event, > several species are caught, and are weighed by one or more methods. Thus a > given event may have more than one record for the same spaecies, as parts > of the catch may be weighed differently. > > When we sample a species for measuring, the event is recorded, but as the > sample may include individuals from throughout the catch, it does not > necessarily relate to the catch-with-method table. Looks like you need a composite primary key here, i.e. a primary key for the "category" of the record will have more than one column (such as species and method of catch). With that you'll be able to uniquely identify the "event" and then associate it with the record. Thanks Jorge, There are many catches per event, one for each species/method, so a composite key would be on event/species/method for the catch. For lengths it would be on event/species (there is no catch weigh method here). There should only be a length record for a matching event/species in the catch (normally constrained via a foreign key) but I cannot create a composite key on catch without including method, so there is no possible unique key on catch to match to the primary key on length. -- Jorge Godoy <jgodoy@xxxxxxxxx>