> Tom Lane writes:
>
> > Oh, I see. So the question still remains: can a MULTIBYTE-aware backend
> > ever use a sort order different from strcmp() order? (That is, not as
> > a result of LOCALE, but just because of the non-SQL-ASCII encoding.)
>
> According to the code, no, because varstr_cmp() doesn't pay attention to
> the multibyte status. Presumably strcmp() and strcoll() don't either.
Right.
> > Actually there are more complicated cases that would depend on more
> > features of the encoding than just sort order. Consider
> >
> > CREATE INDEX fooi ON foo (upper(field1));
> >
> > Operations involving this index will misbehave if the behavior of
> > upper() ever differs between MULTIBYTE-aware and non-MULTIBYTE-aware
> > code. That seems pretty likely for encodings like LATIN2...
>
> Of course in the most general case this is a problem, because a function
> can be implemented totally differently depending on any old #ifdef or
> other external factors.
>
> If the multibyte users think this check is okay, then I don't mind, since
> it's usually what the users would want anyway. I'm just pointing out the
> technical issues.
Right. However, Tom's point is a little bit different, I guess.
As far as I know, most builtin functions taking string data types as
their aruguments would behave same with/without MULTIBYTE. As far as
I know exceptions include:
char_length
quote_ident
quote_literal
ascii
to_ascii
So, for example,
CREATE INDEX fooi ON foo (char_length(field1));
would behave differently with/without MULTIBYTE if the encoding for
the database is not "single byte type".
--
Tatsuo Ishii