Jim Nasby <jim.na...@bluetreble.com> writes: > On 9/5/15 3:50 PM, Tom Lane wrote: >> Greg Stark <st...@mit.edu> writes: >>> But that said, here's a tricksy patch that triggers an assertion >>> failure if the expected_lines is wrong.
>> Hmm ... that would put a premium on the linecount always being exactly >> right (for all callers, not just the help functions). Not sure that >> I want to buy into that --- it would require more complexity in the >> callers than is there now, for sure. > But only in an assert-enabled build. Surely there's enough other > performance hits with asserts enabled that this wouldn't matter? It's not about performance, it's about code complexity and maintenance overhead. I'm looking to *reduce* the amount of personpower expended on those line counts, not increase it; but adding an assertion requirement that the counts be exactly right would require us to spend more development effort on making them right. > As for paging, ISTM the only people that would care are those with > enormous terminal sizes would care, and assuming their pager is less > simply adding -F to $LESS would get them their old behavior. So I think > it's safe to just force paging. Yeah, I'm leaning to just changing the counts to INT_MAX and being done with it. 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