Peter Geoghegan <pe...@2ndquadrant.com> wrote: > So, just to give a bit more weight to my argument that we should > recognise that equivalent strings ought to be treated identically Since we appear to be questioning everything in this area, I'll raise something which has been bugging me for a while: in some other systems I've used, the "tie-breaker" comparison for equivalent values comes after equivalence sorting on *all* sort keys, rather than *each* sort key. For example, this much makes sense with lc_collate = 'en_US.UTF-8': test=# create table c (last_name text not null, first_name text); CREATE TABLE test=# insert into c values ('smith', 'bob'), ('smith', 'peter'), ('SMITH', 'EDWARD'); INSERT 0 3 test=# select * from c order by 2; last_name | first_name -----------+------------ smith | bob SMITH | EDWARD smith | peter (3 rows) This seems completely wrong: test=# select * from c order by 1,2; last_name | first_name -----------+------------ smith | bob smith | peter SMITH | EDWARD (3 rows) I have seen other databases which get it in the order I would expect -- where the C compare only matters within groups of equivalent rows. It seems that PostgreSQL effectively orders by: last_name using collation 'en_US.UTF-8' last_name using collation 'C' first_name using collation 'en_US.UTF-8' first_name using collation 'C' while some other products order by: last_name using collation 'en_US.UTF-8' first_name using collation 'en_US.UTF-8' last_name using collation 'C' first_name using collation 'C' I'm sure the latter is harder to do and slower to execute; but the former just doesn't seem defensible as correct. -Kevin
-- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers