On 2008-02-12 19:39, Ken Johanson wrote:
Dean Gibson (DB Administrator) wrote:
On 2008-02-12 16:17, Ken Johanson wrote:
Dean Gibson (DB Administrator) wrote:
...

I'm guessing you declare an explicit length of 1 (for portability), or do you "CAST (x as char)"? And one might ask in what context we'd need CHAR(1) on a numeric type, or else if substr/ing or left() make the code more readable for other data types..


Actually, I just write "CHAR" for a length of 1.

On a numeric type?.. That's the quintessential part to me...
No, not on a numeric type. The database stores a single byte code from a gov't DB. In a VIEW, I do a table lookup on the code and suffix an English explanation of the code. However, some of the users of the VIEW (eg, php) would like to do a SELECT based on the original value, and I use CAST( ... AS CHAR ) to get just the original code back. I use the CAST as a shorthand for SUBSTRING. I don't know if that is easier for the planner to flatten than a function call, but it's easier (for me) to read (especially if I use the PostgreSQL "::" cast extension).


> What is wrong with using VARCHAR for your purpose????????????????????????????

Simply that a commonly used database (my) does not support it.

By "my", do you mean "MySQL", or "MyDatabase"? If the latter, then while it's your business decision (and/or that of your customers), the availability of decent, free databases should make a compelling case for anyone using anything else, to migrate (and never look back) to something full-featured.
Yes, Mysql, and yes, it's customer driven.

Then I don't understand. While I've never used MySQL, the MySQL web pages apparently indicate that VARCHAR has been supported since version 3.2: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/4.1/en/char.html


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