"Campbell, Lance" <lance@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > Suppose you have a table that consists of a lot of small sized columns with one really large text column. The text column represents an average sized web page. When inserting or updating you will work with only one row at a time. > When selecting information you will either: > A) select all columns in one row for display or editing purposes. > B) Or you will select hundreds of rows but NOT the very large text column. > Question: Is there any performance to be gained from PostgreSQL by > storing the data as two tables versus one table? No, probably not; TOAST will effectively do that for you by off-loading the large text values into the side table. If you were to do an explicit join, there would be some use-cases --- mainly where you were selecting a LOT of rows --- where in theory you could get a smarter plan from the explicit join. TOAST will effectively always fetch the text values via a nestloop-with-inner-indexscan plan, but maybe hashing or merging would be smarter. Unfortunately, with two explicit tables, TOAST would still apply to the second table, which means that what you've really got under the hood is a three-way join, with the intermediate table contributing nothing except overhead. So don't bother ... regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-admin mailing list (pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-admin