Hi! I read the link below and am puzzled by or curious about something. http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/interactive/datatype-character.html The Tip below is intriguing "Tip: There are no performance differences between these three types, apart from the increased storage size when using the blank-padded type. While character(n) has performance advantages in some other database systems, it has no such advantages in PostgreSQL. In most situations text or character varying should be used instead." How can a field that doesn't have a limit like "text" perform similarly to char varying(128), for example? At some point, we need to write data to disk. The more data that needs to be written, the longer the disk write will take, especially when it requires finding free sectors to write to. Another interesting quote from the same page is the following: "Long values are also stored in background tables so they do not interfere with rapid access to the shorter column values. " If the long values are stored in a separate table, on a different part of the disk, doesn't this imply an extra disk seek? Won't it therefore take longer? Sid