2016-03-17 1:02 GMT+01:00 David G. Johnston <david.g.johns...@gmail.com>:
> On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 4:39 PM, Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > >> Jim Nasby <jim.na...@bluetreble.com> writes: >> > On 3/3/16 4:51 AM, Pavel Stehule wrote: >> >> CREATE TABLE a(a int); >> >> CREATE TABLE b(a a.a%TYPE) >> >> >> >> And the people expecting the living relation between table a and table >> >> b. So when I do ALTER a.a, then b.a should be changed. What if I drop >> >> a.a or drop a? >> >> >> >> So this is reason, why I don't would this feature in SQL side. >> >> > I don't buy that. plpgsql doesn't work that way, so why would this? >> > *especially* with the %TYPE decorator. >> >> Yeah. The %TYPE decorator doesn't work like that in the core parser >> either: when you use it, the referenced type is determined immediately >> and then it's just as if you'd written that type name to begin with. >> > > I'm missing something here...%TYPE ends up getting parsed repeatedly and > so appears to be change if the variable upon which it is based changes - > even if once parsed it remains constant for the lifetime of the function's > evaluation. > > I guess what is being said is that the "constant" behavior in SQL ends up > being permanent because a given statement is only ever conceptually parsed > and executed a single time - unlike a function body. The nature of any > solution would still have the same characteristics within a function > because the inherent re-parsing nature and not because of any direct > capability of %TYPE itself. > > I do not see a reason for any of these "type operators" to work >> differently. >> >> Another analogy that might help make the point is >> >> set search_path = a; >> create table myschema.tab(f1 mytype); >> set search_path = b; >> >> If there are types "mytype" in both schemas a and b, is myschema.tab.f1 >> now of type b.mytype? No. The meaning of the type reference is >> determined when the command executes, and then you're done. >> > > And its no different than our treatment of "*" > > CREATE VIEW test_view > SELECT * > FROM temp_table; > > Adding columns to temp_table doesn't impact which columns the view returns. > yes, but there is strong limit. You can append column, but you cannot to alter existing column. Pavel > > David J. > > > >