Rob Richardson wrote:
> The database we install at our customers as part of our 
> product includes an event_history table.  For some reason 
> lost in the mists of time, the most important field in that 
> table, the description, is a varchar field specified to be 
> only 64 characters long.  This leads me to a more fundamental 
> question:  why specify the length of a varchar field at all?  
> Is there a big difference between the amount of disk space 
> taken up by "abc" stored in a varchar(64) field and stored in 
> a varchar field?  How much space does an unspecified-length 
> varchar field take up?  Are there other reasons to use 
> varchar(64) instead of varchar?

You can't have "varchar" without a length in parentheses,
as far as I know.

But you can use "text" which is essentially the same thing.

I can think of two reasons to use varchar(n) instead of text:
- you deliberately want to limit the amount of characters.
- you want to index the column (indexes have a maximum row size).

It is not a performance issue, however, and there is no
wasted space either.

Yours,
Laurenz Albe

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