From 877e296306a2017a18fc7086e9742c8ee3e0a665 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bruce Momjian Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2006 21:23:01 +0000 Subject: Spelling fix. Robert Treat --- doc/src/FAQ/FAQ.html | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc/src') diff --git a/doc/src/FAQ/FAQ.html b/doc/src/FAQ/FAQ.html index b47544feeb5..b20ba4b0948 100644 --- a/doc/src/FAQ/FAQ.html +++ b/doc/src/FAQ/FAQ.html @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ alink="#0000ff">

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for PostgreSQL

-

Last updated: Sat Jun 3 20:17:01 EDT 2006

+

Last updated: Wed Jun 7 17:22:48 EDT 2006

Current maintainer: Bruce Momjian (pgman@candle.pha.pa.us) @@ -694,7 +694,7 @@ table?unlimited

One limitation is that indexes can not be created on columns longer than about 2,000 characters. Fortunately, such indexes are - rarely needed. Uniqueness is best guaranteed by a funtion index + rarely needed. Uniqueness is best guaranteed by a function index of an MD5 hash of the long column, and full text indexing allows for searching of words within the column.

@@ -812,8 +812,8 @@ table?unlimited FROM tab WHERE lower(col) = 'abc'; - This will not use an standard index. However, if you create a - expresssion index, it will be used: + This will not use an standard index. However, if you create an + expression index, it will be used:
     CREATE INDEX tabindex ON tab (lower(col));
 
@@ -957,7 +957,7 @@ length

Every row that is created in PostgreSQL gets a unique OID unless created WITHOUT OIDS. - OIDs are autotomatically assigned unique 4-byte + OIDs are automatically assigned unique 4-byte integers that are unique across the entire installation. However, they overflow at 4 billion, and then the OIDs start being duplicated. PostgreSQL uses OIDs to link its -- cgit v1.2.3