Let's say we have these tables:
CREATE TABLE A (
    id SERIAL NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY
);
CREATE TABLE B (
    id SERIAL NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY
);
CREATE TABLE Parent (
    id SERIAL NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
    aId INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES A (id),
    bId INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES B (id),
    UNIQUE(aId, bId)
);
CREATE TABLE Child (
    parentId INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES Parent (id),
    createdOn TIMESTAMP NOT NULL
);
Is it possible to create a unique constraint on Child such that for all rows in Child at most one references a Parent having some value of aId? Stated another way can I created a unique constraint so that the join of the above tables will have no duplicate aId? I'm thinking not--the grammars of every database I could find seem tied to one table per constraint--but that might be a lack of imagination on my part. (De-normalizing to include aId on Child is one solution, of course.)
 
     
    