A manual check won't do what you think it does. (See below.)
If you check first, every insert requires two round-trips to the database. It might also require serializable transactions.
And you have to trap errors anyway. A duplicate value is just one thing that can go wrong on an insert; there are a lot of other things that can go wrong.
I say just insert, and trap the errors.
The point of a SELECT before INSERT is to determine whether a value already exists in the database. But you can't rely on that to work. Here's why.
Open two terminal sessions (for example), and connect both to your database. This table already exists. It's empty.
create table test (
test_id serial primary key,
test_email varchar(15) not null unique
);
A: begin transaction;
A: select test_email
from test
where test_email = '[email protected]';
(0 rows)
B: begin transaction;
A: insert into test (test_email)
values ('[email protected]');
INSERT 0 1
B: select test_email
from test
where test_email = '[email protected]';
(0 rows)
B: insert into test (test_email)
values ('[email protected]');
(waiting for lock)
A: commit;
B: ERROR: duplicate key value
violates unique constraint...