On 9/13/19 9:14 AM, Adrian Klaver wrote:
On 9/12/19 11:11 PM, Ron wrote:
On 9/13/19 12:28 AM, Matthias Apitz wrote:
Hello,

We're porting a huge Library Management System, written using all kind
of languages one can think of (C, C++, ESQL/C, Perl, Java, ...) on Linux
from the DBS Sybase to PG, millions of lines of code, which works also
with DBS Oracle and in the past with INFORMIX-SE and -ONLINE.

We got to know that in CHAR columns with trailing blanks a

SELECT ... FROM ... WHERE name LIKE 'Ali'

does not match in 'name' having 'Ali '.

Did you forget the "%"?  Because the SQL standard which PostgreSQL follows is:

SELECT ... FROM ... WHERE name LIKE 'Ali%'

The above is if you want to find a string starting with 'Ali'. If you are looking for the complete string 'Ali' then it is appropriate. The OP is looking for a way to automatically match a complete string against a right stripped string from a CHAR field.

This is highly dependent on implementation.  On the RDBMS that I used to work on, trailing whitespace was automatically stripped from CHAR(xx) fields.

--
Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.


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