Andres Freund <and...@anarazel.de> writes: > [ let's use strfromd ]
So I'm having second thoughts about this, based on the fact that strfromd() in't strictly a glibc-ism but is defined in an ISO/IEC standard. That means that we can expect to see it start showing up on other platforms (though a quick search did not find any evidence that it has yet). And that means that we'd better consider quality-of-implementation issues. We know that glibc's version is fractionally faster than using sprintf with "%.*g", but what are the odds that that will be true universally? I don't have a warm feeling about it, given that strfromd's API isn't a very good impedance match to what we really need. I really think that what we ought to do is apply the float[48]out hack I showed in <30551.1538517...@sss.pgh.pa.us> and call it good, at least till such time as somebody wants to propose a full-on reimplementation of float output. I don't want to buy back into having platform dependencies in this area after having just expended a lot of sweat to get rid of them. regards, tom lane