On Wed, 2005-08-31 at 15:29 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
> Matt Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I don't remember the last time I intended to write code that referenced
> > something that did not exist in the database.
> 
> Almost every day, people try to write stuff like
> 
>       CREATE TEMP TABLE foo ... ;
>       INSERT INTO foo ... ;
>       etc etc
>       DROP TABLE foo ;

Point taken.

PL/SQL requires all DDL to be dynamic SQL.  For example:

        execute immediate 'drop table foo';

The stuff inside the string is pretty-much ignored at compile time.

Maybe, then, my idealized PL/pgSQL compiler always allows DDL to
reference any object, but DML is checked against the catalog.


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