Re: Can we go beyond the standard to make Postgres radically better?
От | Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum |
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Тема | Re: Can we go beyond the standard to make Postgres radically better? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | ade50b0c-a69e-3d8d-3f70-52363fff24ae@pgug.de обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Can we go beyond the standard to make Postgres radically better? ("Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-pgsql@hjp.at>) |
Ответы |
Re: Can we go beyond the standard to make Postgres radically better?
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Список | pgsql-general |
On 12/02/2022 20:50, Peter J. Holzer wrote: > On 2022-02-12 01:18:04 +0100, Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum wrote: >> On 10/02/2022 18:22, Peter J. Holzer wrote: >>> On 2022-02-09 21:14:39 -0800, Guyren Howe wrote: >>>> Examples of small things Postgres could have: >>>> >>>> • SELECT * - b.a_id from a natural join b >>> My use case for such a feature are tables which contain one column (or a >>> small number of columns) which you usually don't want to select: A bytea >>> column or a very wide text column. In a program I don't mind (in fact I >>> prefer) listing all the columns explicitely, but exploring a database >>> interactively with psql typing lots of column names is tedious >>> (especially since autocomplete doesn't work here). >> Maybe for this specific use case it's easier to teach psql how to do that, >> instead of trying to amend the SQL implementation? Example: >> >> SELECT * \- col1 \- col2 FROM table >> >> psql looks up the columns, translates * into the actual list minus these two >> columns and lets you continue entering the query. > I think the easiest way to get the columns would be to EXPLAIN(verbose) > the query. Otherwise psql (or whatever your shell is) would have to > completely parse the SQL statement to find the columns. > > (On a tangent, I'm wondering if this could work for autocomplete. The > problem with autocomplete is of course that you probably don't have > a syntactically correct query at the time you need it. So the editor > would have to patch that up before sending it to the database.) I was thinking about this problem for a while, and it's not easy to solve. Hence I came up with the idea that psql could - once the table is known and very specific psql syntax is there (\- as example) replace the * with the actual columns. All of this before the query is run, and as a user you can edit the column list further. The main concern listed further upstream is "surfing the database", in interactive mode. Not the first time I hear this problem. Solving this specific case might reduce the need for a SQL extenson. Note: the attempt above is just an idea, not an actual proposal how to implement this. Regards, -- Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum German PostgreSQL User Group European PostgreSQL User Group - Board of Directors Volunteer Regional Contact, Germany - PostgreSQL Project
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