On Wed, 31 Jul 2002, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote: > > I highly doubt that. Relating two tables to each other via a key, and > > joining them together, allows you to do everything that inheritance > > allows you to do, but also more. If you have difficulty with keys and > > joins, well, you really probably want to stop and fix that problem > > before you do more work on a relational database.... > > I'm still not convinced of this. For example, my friend has a hardware > e-store and every different class of hardware has different properties. ie > modems have baud and network cards have speed and video cards have ram. He > simply just has a 'products' table from which he extends > 'networkcard_products', etc. with the additional fields. Easy.
And what's the problem with networkcard_products being a separate table that shares a key with the products table? CREATE TABLE products (product_id int, ...) CREATE TABLE networkcard_products_data (product_id int, ...) CREATE VIEW networkcard_products AS SELECT products.product_id, ... FROM products JOINT networkcard_products_data USING (product_id) What functionality does table inheritance offer that this traditional relational method of doing things doesn't? cjs -- Curt Sampson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> +81 90 7737 2974 http://www.netbsd.org Don't you know, in this new Dark Age, we're all light. --XTC ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org