G'day,

I believe I've got some bad data in a table, but I'm not sure how it got there, 
or how this scenario is possible.

The table is called tdt_unsent.  The field is str_name_l.  For demonstration 
purposes,  the value is "SMITH".

"select * from tdt_unsent where str_name_l = 'SMITH'" returns 0 rows.
"select * from tdt_unsent where str_name_l ~ '^SMITH'" returns 3 rows.
"select * from tdt_unsent where str_name_l ~ '^SMITH$'" returns 0 rows.
"select length(str_name_l) from tdt_unsent where str_name_l ~ '^SMITH'" returns 
"5".

So, it's as if there is a zero-length character at the end of the value that is 
preventing a match.  Is this possible?  If so, how could this data have been 
created?

Thanks,

Doug Gorley
dgor...@aihs.ca 


-- 
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general

Reply via email to