I'm a little concerned about stability since my Postgresql application has failed three times in the last couple of months. It seems to have failed when too many things are happening at the same time - mostly things that have been instigated by my pointing and clicking.

Bob


----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Glaesemann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Bob Pawley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Postgresql" <pgsql-general@postgresql.org>
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2006 5:18 PM
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Data Conversion



On Feb 1, 2006, at 9:53 , Bob Pawley wrote:

Two way conversion will be a neccesity. My thought was that dual conversion could be not only complex but also have problems with stability.

I'm not sure why it would be a stability issue. As for the complexity, I think once it's implemented you wouldn't have to worry about it by properly encapsulating that complexity, perhaps in procedures. I guess one way to handle the dual conversion issue is to produce a view (based on my previous example)

create view measurement_conversions_view as
select measurement_type
, measurement_unit_in
, measurement_unit_out
, factor
from measurement_conversions
union
select measurement_type
, measurement_unit_out as measurement_unit_in
, measurement_unit_in as measurement_unit_out
, 1::numeric / factor as factor
from measurement_conversions
union
select measurement_type
, measurement_unit as measurement_unit_in
, measurement_unit as measurement_unit_out
, 1 as factor
from measurement_units

It'd also be good to add a constraint (through a trigger) that guarantees that if, for example, the length conversion m => in is the measurement_conversions table, the conversion in => m can't be inserted. This would prevent duplicates in the measurement_conversions_view (and corresponding possible errors arising from slightly different conversion results).

Option 2 would be less complex and there would be less potential stability problems. However, there is some perception of redundancy in having two or more tables contain similar information. But, is it only a perception???

It's not just a perception. You're duplicating the values. You need to always make sure that you're inserting into, updating, and deleting from all of the relevant tables. I think that would be a maintenance nightmare.

Michael Glaesemann
grzm myrealbox com


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