On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 06:56:17PM +0000, Andrew Gierth wrote: > Noah Misch said: > > > I twitched upon reading this, because neither ORDER BY nor FILTER preclude > > the aggregate being MIN or MAX. Perhaps Andrew can explain why he put > > aggorder there back in 2009. > > The bottom line is that I intentionally avoided assuming that an agg with an > aggsortop could only be min() or max() and that having an order by clause > would always be harmless in such cases. I can't think of an actual use case > where it would matter, but I've seen people define some pretty strange aggs > recently. > > So I mildly object to simply throwing away the ORDER BY clause in such cases.
I can't think of another use for aggsortop as defined today. However, on further reflection, min(x ORDER BY y) is not identical to min(x) when the B-tree operator class of the aggsortop can find non-identical datums to be equal. This affects at least min(numeric) and min(interval). min(x) chooses an unspecified x among those equal to the smallest x, while min(x ORDER BY y) can be used to narrow the choice. I will update the comments along those lines and not change semantics after all. Thanks, nm -- Noah Misch EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers