Introduction
  
   This document is the user  manual  for  the  
   PostgreSQL
   database  management system, originally developed at the University
   of California at  Berkeley.   
   PostgreSQL  is  based  on
   
    Postgres release 4.2. 
   The Postgres project, 
   led by Professor Michael Stonebraker, was sponsored  by  the
   Defense  Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the
   Army Research Office (ARO), the National Science  
   Foundation (NSF), and ESL, Inc.
  
  
    What is Postgres?
   
    Traditional   relational  database  management  systems
    (DBMSs) support a data model consisting of a collection
    of named relations, containing attributes of a specific
    type.  In current commercial  systems,  possible  types
    include  floating  point  numbers,  integers, character
    strings, money, and dates.  It is  commonly  recognized
    that  this model is inadequate for future data 
    processing applications.
    The relational  model  successfully  replaced  previous
    models  in  part  because  of its "Spartan simplicity".
    However, as mentioned, this simplicity often makes  the
    implementation  of  certain applications very difficult.
    Postgres offers  substantial  additional
    power  by  incorporating  the following four additional
    basic concepts in such a way that  users  can  easily
    extend the system:
    
     classes
     inheritance
     types
     functions
    
   
   
    Other features provide additional power and flexibility:
    
     constraints
     triggers
     rules
     transaction integrity
    
   
   
    These features put Postgres into the category of databases
    referred to as object-relational. Note that this is distinct
    from those referred to as object-oriented, which in general
    are not as well suited to supporting the traditional relational database languages.
    So, although Postgres has some object-oriented features,
    it is firmly in the relational database world. In fact, some commercial databases
    have recently incorporated features pioneered by Postgres.
   
  
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