Peter Geoghegan <pe...@2ndquadrant.com> writes: > Here is the single, hacky change I've made just for now to the core > parser to quickly see if it all works as expected:
> *************** transformTypeCast(ParseState *pstate, Ty > *** 2108,2113 **** > --- 2108,2116 ---- > if (location < 0) > location = tc->typeName->location; > + if (IsA(expr, Const)) > + location = ((Const*)expr)->location; > + > result = coerce_to_target_type(pstate, expr, inputType, > targetType, > targetTypmod, > > COERCION_EXPLICIT, This does not look terribly sane to me. AFAICS, the main effect of this would be that if you have an error in coercing a literal to some specified type, the error message would point at the literal and not at the cast operator. That is, in examples like these: regression=# select 42::point; ERROR: cannot cast type integer to point LINE 1: select 42::point; ^ regression=# select cast (42 as point); ERROR: cannot cast type integer to point LINE 1: select cast (42 as point); ^ you're proposing to move the error pointer to the "42", and that does not seem like an improvement, especially not if it only happens when the cast subject is a simple constant rather than an expression. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers