Alvaro Herrera wrote: > Oleg Bartunov wrote: >> On Fri, 17 Nov 2006, Andrew Dunstan wrote: > >>> I am also a bit concerned that the names of the proposed objects (parser, >>> dictionary) don't convey their purpose adequately. Maybe TS_DICTIONARY and >>> TS_PARSER might be better if we in fact need to name them. >> this looks reasonable to me. > > Huh, but we don't use keywords with ugly abbreviations and underscores. > How about "FULLTEXT DICTIONARY" and "FULLTEXT PARSER"? (Using > "FULLTEXT" instead of "FULL TEXT" means you don't created common > reserved words, and furthermore you don't collide with an existing type > name.)
sounds fine > > I also think the "thousands of lines" is an exaggeration :-) The > grammar should take a couple dozen at most. The rest of the code would > go to their own files. > > We should also take the opportunity to discuss new keywords for the XML > support -- will we use new grammar, or functions? > that is a good question and we should decide on a direction for that - we already have a feature in shipping code that causes quite some confusion in that regard(autovacuum). What see I from supporting/consulting people is that there are more and more people adapting autovacuum for there databases but those with complex ones want to override them on a per table base. We already provide a rather crude interface for that - namely manually inserting some rows into a system table which is confusing the heck out of people (they are either responding with "why is there now ALTER AUTOVACUUM SET ..." or and equivalent pg_* function for that). I'm not too sure what the most suitable interface for that would be but finding a consistent solution for that might be good nevertheless. Stefan ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate