I am to talk about Postgres’s type system at PGConf:

https://postgresconf.org/conferences/2024/program/proposals/postgres-s-type-system

I picked the issue because I think it’s poorly understood, greatly 
under-discussed, and an excellent way to empower postgres users.

I am reasonably conversant with the issue. I’m not looking for others to write 
the talk for me, but in order to make the best talk I can, I’m asking:

What would you want to see in such a talk?

I’m planning on covering:

- The built-in types that are underused and their advantages (eg inet)
- domains
- such things as details of arrays including multidimensional arrays
- user-defined types, their relationship to tables, and generally how to use 
them

I would spend most of the time discussing ways to make effective use of types. 
Some examples:
- defining functions of rows so the table can be used kind of like a set of 
objects (including the dot notation for invoking functions)
- using UDFs to make code clearer eg if you have an idiosyncratic functional 
index, define it using a function of the row, so it’s easy to get right when 
querying
- using UDFs as a kind of better domain. eg differentiating imperial from 
metric units by requiring an explicit constructor, not just accepting any old 
number

I would mention enumerated types, although I’m inclined to advise that their 
inflexibility (eg can’t delete or rearrange them) means that a related table is 
probably better (I’d be delighted to be proved wrong).

Custom Range Types are an interesting feature, but I can’t think of a good use 
case. Any good examples?

Automatic casting is a feature I’m aware of, but I’d be interested in any cool 
use cases.


Anything I’m missing? Any existing good discussions of the subject?

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