Hi, I have a database that has types in them with unique names. These types are referenced from other tables through a surrogate integer key. I'm now wondering if I should eliminate that surrogate key and just use the name as the primary key. Afaiu, surrogate keys are primarily there to make joining tables or otherwise searching for a record faster, because it's faster to compare two integers than it is to compare two strings.
Now when I want to search for a type in types or another table that references types(type_id), under what circumstances is it advisable to have a surrogate integer key and not use the unique type name? Is searching for an integer as fast as is searching for a string when both have an index? How many records in the type table do I need to make a surrogate key a not unsignificantly faster way to retrieve a row? What about joins? Are these the right questions? Thanks. -- Markus Bertheau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org