Hey Mark, Yeah, I can't imagine an entity in a real project even with more than 100 columns. Its rare case. But if you entities (rows/tuples) of some class (table) can contains variable set of columns (properties) you can look at hstore contrib module.
2010/11/12 John R Pierce <pie...@hogranch.com> > On 11/11/10 9:24 PM, Tom Lane wrote: > >> "Mark Mitchell"<mmitch...@riccagroup.com> writes: >> >>> Is there are hard limit of 1600 that you cannot get around? >>> >> Yes. >> >> Generally, wanting more than a few dozen columns is a good sign that you >> need to rethink your schema design. What are you trying to accomplish >> exactly? >> >> > > indeed. I'd say a good read on 'data normalization' and the Third Normal > Form would be in order. > > relational databases are *not* spreadsheets (and, for that matter, > spreadsheets make lousy relational databases) > > if these 1600+ elements come from an ORM, you probably need to rethink your > object model, as no sane object class should have that many members. > > > > > -- > Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org) > To make changes to your subscription: > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general > -- // Dmitriy.