Peter Eisentraut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Tom Lane writes: >> No, a view is not a table. Try putting an index or trigger on it.
> According to that logic, a domain is not a type. Try putting a check > constraint on it. But that's an additional feature, not a missing feature. I think the reason we are restrictive about the comparable cases for relations (pg_class entries) is that we use pg_class entries for a number of things that users see as unrelated or only weakly related. For example, indexes are not tables by any reasonable definition above the implementation level; sequences are tables only as an artifact of a particular implementation (which I think we'll someday have to abandon BTW); composite types surely aren't tables. It would be surprising for a composite type to be droppable by DROP TABLE. But domains *are* types, both to the user and to the implementation, and so I see no surprise factor in allowing DROP TYPE to work on them. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings