Re: Peter Eisentraut 2016-08-01 <f3e021d3-d843-04a5-d816-6921309b3...@2ndquadrant.com> > > PostgreSQL uses the spaces inconsistently, though. pg_size_pretty uses > > spaces: > > > > # select pg_size_pretty((2^20)::bigint); > > pg_size_pretty > > ──────────────── > > 1024 kB > > because it's "pretty" :)
:) > > SHOW does not: > > > > # show work_mem; > > work_mem > > ────────── > > 1MB > > The original idea might have been to allow that value to be passed back > into the settings system, without having to quote the space. I'm not > sure, but I think changing that might cause some annoyance. That's a good argument for keeping it that way, yes. Re: Bruce Momjian 2016-08-01 <20160801162508.ga28...@momjian.us> > Looking at the Wikipedia article I posted earlier, that also doesn't use > spaces: > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix That article has plenty of occurrences of "10 MB" "528 MB/s" and the like. > I think the only argument _for_ spaces is the output of pg_size_pretty() > now looks odd, e.g.: > > 10 | 10 bytes | -10 bytes > 1000 | 1000 bytes | -1000 bytes > 1000000 | 977KB | -977KB > 1000000000 | 954MB | -954MB > 1000000000000 | 931GB | -931GB > 1000000000000000 | 909TB | -909TB > ^^^^^ ^^^^^ > > The issue is that we output "10 bytes", not "10bytes", but for units we > use "977KB". That seems inconsistent, but it is the normal policy > people use. I think this is because "977KB" is really "977K bytes", but > we just append the "B" after the "K" for bevity. It's the other way round: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_System_of_Units#General_rules | The value of a quantity is written as a number followed by a space | (representing a multiplication sign) and a unit symbol; e.g., 2.21 kg [...] I'd opt to omit the space anywhere where the value is supposed to be fed back into the config (SHOW, --parameters), but use the "pretty" format with space everywhere otherwise (documentation, memory counts in explain output, pg_size_pretty() etc.) Christoph -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers