> Christopher Browne wrote: >> > Personally I'm surprised that the last couple responses seem to center > around not being able to make much money off of it. I agree that it > would require some time investment, but so did building PG in the first > place. Countless people have already sacrificed hours upon hours of > their time with no return on their investment except pride in their work > and a better overall product for everybody to use. I'm not a talented > enough programmer to contribute to the code, but in this way I can do > something to give back to the pg community. > > -- > Tom Hart +1 It seems there's a stalemate, apparently PgSQL needs to be more popular before authors want to write for it, and the public doesn't want to commit to a database that has only a handfull of books available. So, let's do it community-style: wiki. Lots of people have a little time to write a small piece, all we need is a few good men (or women) to oversee the whole thing. Later we can paste all the content together in a PDF. We could arrange a 'print on demand' service and there we are; a book with uptodate firsthand knowledge. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match