Re: Specific names for plpgsql variable-resolution control options?
От | Sergio A. Kessler |
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Тема | Re: Specific names for plpgsql variable-resolution control options? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 49216030911070929v14bdd607gd7ea16b2ebbddd1@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Specific names for plpgsql variable-resolution control options? (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) |
Ответы |
Re: Specific names for plpgsql variable-resolution control options?
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Список | pgsql-hackers |
hi tom, sorry for the out-of-the-blue email (I'm not on the list)... On Nov 6, 2009, at 12:21 PM, Tom Lane wrote: > I believe we had consensus that plpgsql should offer the following > three > behaviors when a name in a SQL query could refer to either a plpgsql > variable or a column from a table of the query: > * prefer the plpgsql variable (plpgsql's historical behavior) > * prefer the table column (Oracle-compatible) > * throw error for the ambiguity (to become the factory default) > and that we wanted a way for users to select one of these behaviors > at the > per-function level, plus provide a SUSET GUC to determine the default > behavior when there is not a specification in the function text. > > What we did not have was any concrete suggestions for the name or > values of the GUC, nor for the exact per-function syntax beyond the > thought that it could look something like the existing '#option dump' > modifier. > > The code is now there and ready to go, so I need a decision on these > user-visible names in order to proceed. Anyone have ideas? is this become configurable somehow, how would I know that my code work as expected when I distribute my code ? one option is to put foo_variable_conflict = error throughout the code, which can be thousands of lines, which is not nice just to be sure my code works as expected no matter what... (setting a general GUC can interfere with another code, which presumes different things) and moreover, is a burden for postgresql that should be supporting 'foo_variable_conflict' in the foreseeable future... IMO, postgres should stick with one option (+1 for error) and be done with this, just one simple rule to rule them all... and with this, there is no need to band-aid the code just in case... regards, /sergio
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