Glyn Astill wrote:
More documentation would be nice, but surely it's more down to
getting the type of user base that write your average "how to" books?
The O'Reilly books seem to cover postgres quite nicely, however I've
only had a flick through in shops.
One thing's for sure, 2 months ago I signed up to the most common
postgresql and m*sql lists when I was trying to decide what was best
for our backend. At the time m*sql was my 1st choice, and it took me
less than a day to drop those toys in the street and decide
postgresql was the way forward.
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I definitely think that the lists are one of the shining stars for
postgresql support. I've learned some good reference stuff from online
docs/google but the really tricky questions were only answered here, and
amazingly enough, quickly and with good humor. Perhaps what we really
need is somebody to comb through the archives looking for common
problems or exceptional solutions and compile them into a "book".
--
Tom Hart
IT Specialist
Cooperative Federal
723 Westcott St.
Syracuse, NY 13210
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(315) 476-0567 (fax)
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