>>> Ron Mayer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > It seems to me that the last remaining place where we input > a SQL-2008 standard literal and do something different from > what the standard suggests is with the string: > '-1 2:03:04' > The standard seems to say that the "-" affects both the > days and hour/min/sec part; Agreed. > while PostgreSQL historically, > and the patch as I first submitted it only apply the negative > sign to the days part. > > IMHO when the IntervalStyle GUC is set to "sql_standard", > it'd be better if the parsing of this literal matched the > standard. We already have the precedent where DateStyle > is used to interpret otherwise ambiguous output. > > If the IntervalStyle is set to anything other than sql_standard > we'll keep parsing them the old way; so I think backwards > compatibility issues would be minimized. And those > using the sql_standard mode are likely to be standards > fanatics anyway, and would probably appreciate following the > standard rather than the backward compatible mode. > > Thoughts? I think it would be good to be able to configure PostgreSQL such that it didn't take standards-compliant literals and silently treat them in a non-standard way. What you propose here seems sane to me, but if someone objects, it would be good for some other value or other GUC to provide compliant behavior. -Kevin
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