Peter Eisentraut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Tom Lane wrote: >> I just noticed that when the BY option was added to plpgsql FOR >> loops, no real error checking was done. If you specify a zero step >> value, you'll have an infinite loop. If you specify a negative >> value, the loop variable will increment in the "wrong direction" >> until integer overflow occurs. Neither of these behaviors seem >> desirable in the least.
> That seems to be fairly normal proramming language behavior. Well, it's about what I'd expect from C or something at a similar level of (non) abstraction. But I dislike the idea that plpgsql should have behavior as machine-dependent as that the number of iterations will depend on the value of INT_MIN. Also, at the SQL level our usual policy is to throw errors for obvious programmer mistakes, and it's hard to argue that a zero or negative step isn't a programmer mistake. Had we defined the stepping behavior differently (ie, make "BY -1" work like REVERSE) then there would be some sanity in allowing negative steps, but I don't see the sanity in it given the implemented behavior. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate