* Robert Haas (robertmh...@gmail.com) wrote: > Second, if you did manage to develop something which was significantly > more compatible with Oracle than PostgreSQL or PL/pgsql is today, > you'd probably find that the community wouldn't accept it.
Agreed. Moving PostgreSQL forward is what the community is interested in- not duplicating what another database product has for the strict goal of easing migrations from those databases (be it Oracle or MSSQL or MySQL). > To take another example, I've been complaining about the fact > that PostgreSQL 8.3+ requires far more typecasts in stored procedures > than any other database I'm aware of for years, probably since before > I joined EnterpriseDB. And I still think we're kidding ourselves to > think that we've got that right when nobody else is doing something > similar. I don't think the community should reverse that decision to > benefit EnterpriseDB, or to be compatible with Oracle: I think the > community should reverse that decision because it's stupid, and the > precedent of other systems demonstrates that it is possible to do > better. Oracle's handling of reserved words also seems to be > considerably less irritating than ours, and I'd propose that we > improve that in PostgreSQL too, if I knew how to do it. > Unfortunately, I suspect that requires jettisoning bison and rolling > our own parser generator, and it's hard to argue that would be a good > investment of effort for the benefit we'd get. Also agreed on this, though any serious discussion on this would deserve its own thread. Thanks! Stephen
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