Extract from the documentation of the Column
:
unique – When True, indicates that this column contains a unique constraint, or if index is True as well, indicates that the Index should be created with the unique flag. To specify multiple columns in the constraint/index or to specify an explicit name, use the UniqueConstraint or Index constructs explicitly.
As these belong to a Table and not to a mapped Class, one declares those in the table definition, or if using declarative as in the __table_args__
:
# version1: table definition
mytable = Table('mytable', meta,
# ...
Column('customer_id', Integer, ForeignKey('customers.customer_id')),
Column('location_code', Unicode(10)),
UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code', name='uix_1')
)
# or the index, which will ensure uniqueness as well
Index('myindex', mytable.c.customer_id, mytable.c.location_code, unique=True)
# version2: declarative
class Location(Base):
__tablename__ = 'locations'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key = True)
customer_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('customers.customer_id'), nullable=False)
location_code = Column(Unicode(10), nullable=False)
__table_args__ = (UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code', name='_customer_location_uc'),
)
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
db = SQLAlchemy()
class Location(Base):
__table_args__ = (
# this can be db.PrimaryKeyConstraint if you want it to be a primary key
db.UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code'),
)
customer_id = Column(Integer,ForeignKey('customers.customer_id')
location_code = Column(Unicode(10))
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