hi all! sorry if you are recieving this twice, i amm too stupid to file a simple bugreport (3rd!!! try already)
i am using version 7.4.7/Debian of postgres. as far as i understand the standard, the following situation should not be possible. neither is it stated in the manual that the select is not conforming to the standard. i have the following data: table L: LNR ORT LCODE MENGE L1 Graz A 1000 L2 Wien C 500 L3 Wien C 1500 L4 Linz B 1000 L5 Graz B 300 table P: PNR PNAME ORT PREIS P1 Alpha Wien 50.00 P2 Delta Linz 95.00 P3 Sigma Linz 75.00 P4 Omega Wien 40.00 now the problem: select l.ort; gives: ORT Graz Wien Wien Linz Graz select l.ort from p; gives: ORT Graz Wien Wien Linz Graz Graz Wien Wien Linz Graz Graz Wien Wien Linz Graz Graz Wien Wien Linz Graz i know what it is doing, but still i feel this should be considered a bug as this "feature" is very inviting to bugs in scripts. i asked around and everybody seems very astounished by the results one gets here from postgres. please let me know if i am mistaken i thank you 1000000 times for your excellent work! -> i am trying to replace oracle with postgres at our university and the more standard-compliant postgresql is, the better are my chances :-) regs, klaus ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])