On 11/8/24 20:33, Robert Haas wrote:
On Thu, Nov 7, 2024 at 4:38 PM Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
The trick there is to keep them predictable, because as I mentioned in
my previous response, there may be people depending on knowing what
name will be assigned.  We're working with a ton of history here,
and I'm not really convinced that change will be change for the
better.

Yeah, I don't really want to be the one to break somebody's query that
explicitly references "*VALUES*" or whatever. At least not without a
better reason than I currently have. If this were just a display
artifact I think finding some way to clean it up would be pretty
worthwhile, but I would need a better reason to break working SQL.
Thanks for this topic! Having run into this years ago, I was confused by eref and alias fields. I frequently use eref during debugging. Also, knowing the naming convention makes it much easier to resolve issues with only an explanation when the user can't provide any other information. I wonder if other people who work with EXPLAIN a lot already have some sort of habit here. I agree that the naming convention can float, but please let it be stable and predictable. Also, I'm not sure how other extension developers operate, but in a handful of mine, I use the fact that eref always contains a name - the relational model requires a name for each (even intermediate) table and column, doesn't it? Also, do not forget that these names can be used in pg_hint_plan hints - one more reason to make it stable.

--
regards, Andrei Lepikhov


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