On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 1:45 PM, Tom Lane<t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > Robert Haas <robertmh...@gmail.com> writes: >> I may be thick as a post here and say "oh, I'm a moron" when you >> explain this to me, but I still don't understand why that would >> require the XML notation to interpose an intermediate node. Why can't >> "filter" node itself can be the labelled container? > > Filter isn't a node; it's a property of the containing Plan node.
My use of the word node was poorly chosen, since that word has a specific meaning in the context of PG. > The way we have this set up, there's a distinction between properties > and groups, which AFAICS we have to have in order to have directly > comparable structures in XML and JSON. Didn't you design this > yourself? Yes, I did. But the point is that as far as I can see, the following two things are equivalent: <Filter><Text>(f1 > 0)</Text></Filter> "Filter": { "Text": "(f1 > 0)" } And this is not: <Filter><Expr><Text>(f1 > 0)</Text></Expr></Filter> The latter would be equivalent to something like this in JSON: "Filter" : { "Expr" : { "Text: "(f1 > 0)" } } or if you intended the <Expr> thing to be an array-type container, then it would be equivalent to this: "Filter" : { [ { "Text: "(f1 > 0)" } ] } Would it be helpful for me to try to reduce this to code? > (I think part of the issue is that containers in JSON are anonymous > whereas XML wants to assign them a named type. That's fine with me, > in fact the JSON approach looks rather impoverished.) That does make things a little tricky, though it has the virtue of mapping nicely onto data structures other than XML. ...Robert -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers