Tuesday, July 10. 2012PostgreSQL: Up and Running book officially outPrinter FriendlyRecommended Books: PostgreSQL: Up and Running
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Is there any chance you would make the Kindle version available for Europe on Amazon.com?
Funny I don't even own a Kindle. Does this link work? I think this is the kindle link
http://astore.amazon.com/postgresonline-20/detail/B008IGIKY6
The link does work, but this is the actual Kindle e-book listing: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008IGIKY6/ref=nosim/175-6170630-3323238?tag=postgresonline-20&linkCode=sb1&camp=212353&creative=380549 . In a sidebox, it says: "This title is not available for customers from your location in:
Europe..." Might get it from O'Reilly's, but I wanted to read the Kindle sample first.
I wonder if you just change the .com to .co.uk or some other amazon site if it would work.
When I change it, it list the price in pounds for example http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B008IGIKY6/ref=nosim/175-6170630-3323238?tag=postgresonline-20&linkCode=sb1&camp=212353&creative=380549 This one lists price in Euro: http://www.amazon.it/dp/B008IGIKY6/ref=nosim/175-6170630-3323238?tag=postgresonline-20&linkCode=sb1&camp=212353&creative=380549
I've tried that when I first got the message some time ago with a different book. Only amazon.com sells e-book internationally, the .co.uk, .it and other 'localised' domains sell them only to people in that particular country.
It's probably a restriction imposed by the published, probably for no good reason (might be a default setting at Amazon).
I will be picking this up for sure. Just based on your great website articles I know it will be written in a very clear to understand manner.
Nice work!
Such a bad book... really!! You even got bad copy-paste examples which don't work as you've described.
I was anticipating it but now I'm disappointed.
Ivo,
Can you be more specific in your criticism? Which chapter? which example? What version of PostgreSQL are you using? Some examples are designed for 9.1 and 9.2 We can make corrections to the book if we have a clearer idea what your issue is.
One example for incorrect query output is in the section "Time Zones: What It Is and What It Isn’t". On the same topic you state that "PostgreSQL support for temporal data is unparalleled." What does that mean really? Do you say Oracle for example doesn't have as good support as PostgreSQL? In the section you don't give no exploitation whatsoever. IMO a developer should either make this conclusion for himself or you should give your arguments.
Also when you describe in "SQL views" you start to wildly use the term "rule" but in the book so far there is no notion of what a "rule" might be. I know what a rule is but this doesn't mean a new PostgreSQL user is familiar with that.
Ivo,
In a longer book we would go more into detail of why we think PostgreSQL temporal data support is unparalleled. For one the 9.2 will have temporal range support (which we mention in the second sentence) and has period extension in prior versions. I don't think this is a feature Oracle has. Any rate that is not a mistake but an opinionated understatement at best. Regarding the query example where you saw incorrect output, which one is that? There are a couple examples in that section. One of them we did say you'd get a different answer depending on what your default time zone is and that was intentional. If it is truly a mistake, we would like to correct. Keep in mind any corrections we make if you ordered the e-Book you will get them fairly quickly. Good point on SQL views. That we should probably amend. We did provide a link to an example of rules and how they are used though. We tried to play down rules (evidentally not well) and even didn't give an example, since the preferred way from 9.1+ is to use triggers which we do provide two examples of (one for views and one for a table). |
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