Andrew,
This has been quite helpful. My main concern is CPU cost. Thanks for the
input.
--Radhika
> On Tue, Apr 17, 2007 at 02:53:54PM -0400, Radhika Sambamurti wrote:
>> that hold money fields and rates from varchar to float. I do not want to
>> convert to numeric because numeric is a special string type.
>
> I think you should reconsider. The _only_ correct storage for your
> money data (i.e. if you want to do calculations on them) is numeric.
> Float is always wrong, in every application, for this sort of work.
> Obviously, you can store the values as text, but if you want to do
> calculations, you'll need to cast (in which case you're casting to
> numeric, I hope, or you could lose precision).
>
>> The question is: how accurate is floating point numbers in Postgres. We
>
> As accurate as they are in the underlying C implementation, which is
> to say "not accurate enough for financial data".
>
> A
>
> --
> Andrew Sullivan | ajs@crankycanuck.ca
> A certain description of men are for getting out of debt, yet are
> against all taxes for raising money to pay it off.
> --Alexander Hamilton
>
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