Hi Calle, You can try the solution mentioned by Pravesh. Alternatively, pgAdmin ERD also allows you to drag the table and drop it in ERD. So you can start with a blank ERD and drag the tables you need.
On Thu, Dec 7, 2023 at 9:13 AM Pravesh Sharma < pravesh.sha...@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > Hi Calle, > > By default, pgAdmin creates ERD for all the related tables. To generate > ERD for a single table, you can set the value at *Preferences -> ERD tool > -> Options -> Table Relation Depth* to 0. > > Please let me know if this resolves the issue. > > Regards, > Pravesh > > On Wed, Dec 6, 2023 at 11:43 PM Calle Hedberg <calle.hedb...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I have a large and very complicated database, where the complete ERD is >> so large that it is very hard to find anything (even with a 45" monitor and >> zooming out). Hundreds of tables, hundreds or relationships. >> >> I have tried to create an ERD for a single table only, but that does not >> seem to work - every time I do it, the result is a complete ERD for the >> whole database. >> >> Is this a bug, or have I missed something? I'm selecting one table, >> right-click and select "ERD for Table". But I get the complete diagram... >> >> Best regards >> Calle >> > > > -- > > <http://www.enterprisedb.com> > > Pravesh Sharma > > Software Engineer > > +91 9406461406 > > www.enterprisedb.com > > Power to Postgres > > <https://www.linkedin.com/company/edbpostgres> > <https://twitter.com/edbpostgres?lang=en> > <https://www.facebook.com/EDBpostgres> > <https://www.instagram.com/EDBpostgres/> > -- Thanks, Aditya Toshniwal pgAdmin Hacker | Sr. Software Architect | *enterprisedb.com* <https://www.enterprisedb.com/> "Don't Complain about Heat, Plant a TREE"