I found a little LIKE/CHAR() surprise --- below is a table and query against a CHAR(10) field:
test=> CREATE TABLE test (x char(10)); CREATE TABLE test=> INSERT INTO test values ('hi'); INSERT 0 1 test=> SELECT * FROM test WHERE x = 'hi'; x ------------ hi (1 row) The above works because both sides are converted to 'bpchar'; explain shows that: test=> EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM test WHERE x = 'hi'; QUERY PLAN ------------------------------------------------------ Seq Scan on test (cost=0.00..33.12 rows=9 width=14) Filter: (x = 'hi'::bpchar) ^^^^^^ (2 rows) The following does not work: test=> SELECT * FROM test WHERE x LIKE 'hi'; x --- (0 rows) It seems LIKE is considering the trailing CHAR(10) field spaces as significant, even though our documentations says: Values of type <type>character</type> are physically padded with spaces to the specified width <replaceable>n</>, and are stored and displayed that way. However, the padding spaces are treated as semantically insignificant. Trailing spaces are --> disregarded when comparing two values of type <type>character</type>, and they will be removed when converting a <type>character</type> value to one of the other string types. Note that trailing spaces <emphasis>are</> semantically significant in <type>character varying</type> and <type>text</type> values. It says trailing spaces are not significant for character comparisons --- the real question is whether LIKE is a comparison. Obvioiusly '=' is a comparison, but the system does not treat LIKE as a comparison in terms of trailing spaces. Is that desired behavior? I did an EXPLAIN on the query and found '~~' was being used and 'hi' was being converted to text: test=> explain select * from test where x like 'hi'; QUERY PLAN ------------------------------------------------------ Seq Scan on test (cost=0.00..33.12 rows=9 width=14) Filter: (x ~~ 'hi'::text) ^^ ^^^^ (2 rows) so I then checked psql \do to see what operators there were for ~~: test=> \do ~~ List of operators Schema | Name | Left arg type | Right arg type | Result type | Description ------------+------+---------------+----------------+-------------+------------------------- pg_catalog | ~~ | bytea | bytea | boolean | matches LIKE expression --> pg_catalog | ~~ | character | text | boolean | matches LIKE expression pg_catalog | ~~ | name | text | boolean | matches LIKE expression pg_catalog | ~~ | text | text | boolean | matches LIKE expression (4 rows) The one marked matches the arguments so it seems the comparison being done is not character and character, but character and text. I realize trim() could be used to get the desired behavior, but is our behavior consistent? -- Bruce Momjian <br...@momjian.us> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com + It's impossible for everything to be true. + -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers