Andrew Dunstan <and...@dunslane.net> writes: > I've been sitting here for a while mulling none too happily over the > debate on the names for the proposed JSON extraction functions. I > haven't really been happy with any of the suggestions, much, not least > my own original function names which were really only intended as > placeholders. Last night in the still watches I decided I just couldn't > go with a function name as almost totally content-free as get(), or even > get_text(). And I don't think prepending "json_'" to the name helps much > either.
Agreed. > Just concentrating to start with on those get() functions, in the simple > case we really don't need them at all. hstore has the "->" operator > without documenting the underlying function ("fetchval"). So maybe we > should just do that. Well, not documenting the underlying function does not relieve you from having to name it in a reasonably sane fashion. It still wouldn't do to call it "get()". > * I'd be inclined to stick with json_array_length() and > json_object_keys() - I think they describe pretty well what they do. > hstore's skeys() does more or less the same as json_object_keys(), > so we could use that if we want to be consistent. I don't think it's > a terribly good name though. > * json_unnest() should certainly be renamed. Alternatives that come to > mind are json_unfold() or json_elements() or json_array_elements(). > * json_each(), json_each_as_text(), json_populate_record() and > json_populate_recordset() - to be consistent with hstore we could > remove the "json_". We probably should remove the "_as_ from > json_each_as_text(). I don't particularly have a dog in this fight, but do we really want some of these to have a json_ prefix and others not? 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