> > I still remember a post from somebody on the phpbuilder site that had > changed a field from varchar to date and all the dates he had got changed > to 0000-00-00. > > He most unimpressed, especially since he (being typical of a lot of MySQL > users) didn't have a backup. >
Ah, yes. Classic. I was talking about a development scenario. Anyone who changes a huge amount of important data to a new form without a clearly defined algorithm is not making a wise choice. That's kind of like if you have a perl script operating on an important file: you don't want it to just kill all your data, so you do a few tests first. And it really is a minor matter of convenience. I end up dropping and recreating all my tables a lot in the early stages of development, which is mildly annoying. Certainly not as bad, I suppose, as if you're led to believe that a feature does something safely, and it kills all your data. So, you're right. It's probably better that it's never implemented. Regards, Jeff ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org