On Mon, 27 Jun 2005, Pieter-Jan Savat wrote: > I was wondering if the following issue is in fact a bug, or just > inconvenient behaviour... > > say a table looks like this: > > table > --- > c (varchar) > '20' > '0' > '-10' > 'klj' > '> 5' > 'qwerty' > '< 6' > > The query select * from table where c < 5 will return for instance the > tuple containing '20'. > In other words, postgresql 8.0 will not automatically cast the results > to a numeric value and only take into account those tuples that can be > cast (not 'klj' nor 'qwerty') ... unlike some other databases .... > > Any (standard) solutions to this problem?
I don't think so in general, since afaik SQL92 makes the comparison c < 5 illegal (I don't see anywhere that says that numerics and character strings are comparable). I believe the only reason the above works in PostgreSQL is that both int and varchar can implicitly cast to text currently; if the int->text cast were made non-implicit it would error trying to find a valid operator. I can think of ways to get the requested behavior in PostgreSQL that involve changing the query, but those wouldn't be portable to something else. You could also make a function that did the cast if possible or returned NULL and make appropriate operators between the types, however those semantics are pretty strange, and I'm not sure if it's a good idea to change them wholesale for the whole system. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org