On 09/19/2014 08:50 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
> smcg2...@frii.com writes:
>> In a postgresql-9.3.1 database with UTF8 encoding I can do:
> 
>>   select convert_from (E'\\x68656c6c6f', 'LATIN1');
>>    convert_from 
>>   --------------
>>    hello
> 
>> But when I explicitly give the "to" encoding:
> 
>>   select convert (E'\\x68656c6c6f', 'LATIN1', 'UTF8');
>>      convert    
>>   --------------
>>    \x68656c6c6f
> 
>> Why does that second one give different results from the first? 
> 
> convert_from() produces a result of type text.  But convert() returns
> bytea, because its output is not necessarily valid in the current
> database encoding.  It's the same bytes, but it prints differently.
> (You could ameliorate the unreadability by changing the bytea_output
> setting.)

I my case I routinely deal with multi-byte utf-8 characters so the 
"escape" format doesn't help much. 

>> Second question: why is that none of the convert* functions are 
>> marked as immutable (thus preventing me from creating a functional 
>> index using them).  Surely if I convert \x68 to utf-8 the result
>> will *always* be "h", won't it?
> 
> Well, no, it'll be whatever the conversion function says it is;
> and encoding conversion functions are replaceable through DDL.
> 
> I recall some discussion to the effect that that was silly and
> we should rip out CREATE CONVERSION and friends in favor of
> hard-wired conversion rules.  Nothing's been done about it though.

Well, if it matters, count me as +1.

Thanks very much for the explanation, things are clearer now. :-)


-- 
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