On Thu, 2005-06-02 at 17:47 -0400, Marcelo wrote: > Hi, > Thanks for your reply, but I have some doubts. > > Are yoy sugesting I create the column as an Integer then change it to > Serial? in Pgsql 7 you cant change a column type. > > If I create the column as an int then add a default value, how can I make > this default value increment with each insert? > > Thanks again for your help. > Marcelo > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Scott Marlowe" <smarlowe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > To: "Marcelo" <marcelo@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: <pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Thursday, June 02, 2005 4:43 PM > Subject: Re: adding columns with defaults is not implemented > > > > On Thu, 2005-06-02 at 15:29, Marcelo wrote: > > > Hello, > > > Using Postgres 7.4, I am trying to perform an "alter table > > > temptable add column "myCol" serial" > > > > > > It gives the following msg > > > ERROR: adding columns with defaults is not implemented > > > > > > You cannot add a column that is serial in a table which already has > > > data in postgres 7. > > > > > > Is there a way I can create a serial column on a table which already > > > has data? Or is the only solution upgrading to postgres 8 ? > > > > You can add a default after you add the column with a separate alter > > table statement... > > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > > TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command > > (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate > subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx so that your > message can get through to the mailing list cleanly [Bottom posting to the top-posted reply] .... You would have to do this in steps: Assuming that "mytable" exists and "mycol" is currently of type int and currently has as its max value 100: create sequence mytable_mycol_seq start with 101; alter table mytable alter mycol set default nextval('mytable_mycol_seq'::text); At this point any new inserts will start autoincrementing the mycol field starting with value 101. Sven ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match