Josh Berkus <j...@agliodbs.com> writes: > Tom, > >> If you're proposing changing the contents of the default prompt, I think >> that has very little chance of passing. A new option for something to >> add into a custom prompt might get accepted. I'm not sure that that >> approach would do much for the scenario you describe, since it's >> unlikely that anyone would add it to their prompt (at least not before >> they'd gotten burnt...). However, I don't recall hearing of anyone >> getting confused like this before, and you say you figured it out pretty >> quickly, so it doesn't seem like a big problem. > > Well, I think having a \ command to show the current \o setting would be > fine. Actually, it might be better to show *all* psql settings with a > general command, including things like \timing and \pset.
Actually in my case, I've also used \t and \a psql commands to produce undecorated machine-readable output and now I think it would be nice to also show the status of these in the prompt. What if we add '%\' substitute to expand to the list of all settings with non-default values? Like this: postgres=# \set PROMPT1 '%/%\%R%# ' postgres=# -- Nothing is set, so '%\' expands to an empty string. postgres=# \t Showing only tuples. postgres\t=# \a Output format is unaligned. postgres\a\t=# \o /path/to/output/file.out postgres\a\o=/path/to/output/file.out\t=# Not sure how \pset could fit there, it might be a bit excessive. Another idea is we could add \O and \G commands that will act like the plain \o and \g, but will set \a and \t automatically. I mean it must be quite often that you don't need all the decoration when you save query results to a file, so instead of doing \a, \t, \g (then setting \a and \t back) you can just do \G and move on. -- Alex -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers