On 15/08/07, Gregory Stark <stark@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > "Phoenix Kiula" <phoenix.kiula@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > I'm grappling with a lot of reporting code for our app that relies on > > queries such as: > > > > SELECT COUNT(*) FROM TABLE WHERE ....(conditions)... > >... > > The number of such possibilities for multiple WHERE conditions is > > infinite... > > Depends on the "conditions" bit. You can't solve all of the infinite > possibilities -- well you can, just run the query above -- but if you want > to do better it's all about understanding your data. I am not sure what the advice here is. The WHERE condition comes from the indices. So if the query was not "COUNT(*)" but just a couple of columns, the query executes in less than a second. Just that COUNT(*) becomes horribly slow. And since the file system based query caching feature of PG is unclear to me (I am just moving from MySQL where the cache is quite powerful) I don't quite know what to do to speed up these queries! ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org/