"PostgreSQL Bugs List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > These all return 0. > select 1::bit; > select 2::bit; > select 111::bit; > select 101::bit;
"bit" means "bit(1)" per SQL spec, so only the first of these could possibly act as you're expecting anyway. The reason none of them do is that the coercion function actually yields bit(32), with the MSB of the integer at the left, and then coercion to bit(1) drops all but the sign bit. So for example regression=# select (255)::bit; bit ----- 0 (1 row) regression=# select (255)::bit(32); bit ---------------------------------- 00000000000000000000000011111111 (1 row) regression=# select (-255)::bit(32); bit ---------------------------------- 11111111111111111111111100000001 (1 row) regression=# select (-255)::bit(1); bit ----- 1 (1 row) There was previous discussion of this a month or so ago, but nobody could come up with a reasonable definition that didn't have large implementability or backwards-compatibility issues ... regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend