On Mon, 2023-11-20 at 09:52 +0000, Erki Eessaar wrote: > Let me assume that there is a table T with columns a, b, c, d, e, f, g, and h. > > If one wants to select data from all the columns except d and e, then one has > to write > > SELECT a, b, c, f, g, h > FROM T; > > instead of writing > > SELECT ALL BUT (d, e) > FROM T; > > or something similar (perhaps by using keywords EXCEPT or EXCLUDE).
This has been discussed before (repeatedly); see for example https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CANcm6wbR3EG7t-G%3DTxy64Yt8nR6YbpzFRuTewJQ%2BkCq%3DrZ8M2A%40mail.gmail.com All previous attempts went nowhere. > I think that such syntax would be useful and if more and more DBMS-s start to > offer it, then perhaps one day it will be in the SQL standard as well. One of the reasons *against* the feature is that the SQL standard committee might one day come up with a feature like that using a syntax that conflicts with whatever we introduced on our own. Yours, Laurenz Albe