Quoting Ben <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Yes, I don't understand why people seem to keep complaining about > Postgres' documentation - it is by far the best reference documentation > I've ever come across. > > Maybe it's that there isn't much tutorial content in the documentation - > for somebody trying to learn how to do SQL in the first place, it's not > going to hold your hand and I could see how that will turn off newbies. >
I agree - it is very clear and complete. I do think that tutorials will help. Tutorials being - 1. Basic SQL (one must understand that if you want your product to go forward you have to teach some basic fundamentals - again no barrier to entry = (usually) no formal training) 2. General Tutorials (see above) 3. Advanced Usage Tutorials (see above, again) Acceptance of PG could be greatly accelerated by more: 1. small projects using PG as a backend (as stated in previous thread post) 2. documenation coming from multiple sources. Don't ask me to explain why, but one seems to equate robustness, usability, etc... with the more titles one sees. If you go to Barnes and Noble's and look there for DB books you see the wall of red (Oracle books), black (M$oft), blue (MySQL). I simply point out that perception being as it is - PG is not there. I am trying to learn more and more about it to remedy my newcomer understanding of PG. Do not read this as if I am a newbie to DB's; I am not ignorant. I talk of perception - if you get PG into the hands of more newbies and make them feel good you have a viral marketing strategy that costs you no $. I fell for it years ago with MySQL, but I have since learned. Now that I have Oracle experience as a reference I see MySQL as lacking and trying to hoodwink me. Most never make it out of the cloud. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])