On 04.07.2016 05:51, Pavel Stehule wrote:
2016-07-04 5:19 GMT+02:00 Pavel Stehule <pavel.steh...@gmail.com <mailto:pavel.steh...@gmail.com>>: 2016-07-04 4:25 GMT+02:00 Craig Ringer <cr...@2ndquadrant.com <mailto:cr...@2ndquadrant.com>>: On 3 July 2016 at 09:32, Euler Taveira <eu...@timbira.com.br <mailto:eu...@timbira.com.br>> wrote: On 02-07-2016 22 <tel:02-07-2016%2022>:04, Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum wrote: > The attached patch adds a new function "to_date_valid()" which will > validate the date and return an error if the input and output date do > not match. Tests included, documentation update as well. > Why don't you add a third parameter (say, validate = true | false) instead of creating another function? The new parameter could default to false to not break compatibility. because SELECT to_date('blah', 'pattern', true) is less clear to read than SELECT to_date_valid('blah', 'pattern') and offers no advantage. It's likely faster to use a separate function too. personally I prefer first variant - this is same function with stronger check. Currently probably we have not two similar function - one fault tolerant and second stricter. There is only one example of similar behave - parse_ident with "strict" option. The three parameters are ok still - so I don't see a reason why we have to implement new function. If you need to emphasize the fact so behave should be strict, you can use named parameters select to_date('blah', 'patter', strict => true)
The new function is not "strict", it just adds a validation step: postgres=# select to_date_valid(NULL, NULL); to_date_valid --------------- (1 row) -- Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum German PostgreSQL User Group European PostgreSQL User Group - Board of Directors Volunteer Regional Contact, Germany - PostgreSQL Project -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers