diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index bc016c4..a5a0aa3 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ That's it — EF Core can now read and write string enums. EF Core stores string enums in non-nullable string columns (`NVARCHAR(MAX)` in SQL Server, `TEXT` in Postgres). -> If you'd like to store string enums as native Postgres enum types instead of `TEXT`, see [StrEnum.Npgsql](https://github.com/StrEnum/StrEnum.Npgsql/). +> If you'd like to store string enums as native Postgres enum types instead of `TEXT`, see [StrEnum.Npgsql.EntityFrameworkCore](https://github.com/StrEnum/StrEnum.Npgsql.EntityFrameworkCore/). Running `dotnet ef migrations add Init` produces: