"Chuck McDevitt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> At Teradata, we certainly interpreted the spec to allow case-preserving,
> but case-insensitive, identifiers.
Really?
As I see it, the controlling parts of the SQL spec are (SQL99 sec 5.2)
26) A <regular identifier> and a <delimited identifier> are
equivalent if the <identifier body> of the <regular identifier>
(with every letter that is a lower-case letter replaced by the
corresponding upper-case letter or letters) and the <delimited
identifier body> of the <delimited identifier> (with all
occurrences of <quote> replaced by <quote symbol> and all
occurrences of <doublequote symbol> replaced by <double quote>),
considered as the repetition of a <character string literal>
that specifies a <character set specification> of SQL_IDENTIFIER
and an implementation-defined collation that is sensitive to
case, compare equally according to the comparison rules in
Subclause 8.2, "<comparison predicate>".
27) Two <delimited identifier>s are equivalent if their <delimited
identifier body>s, considered as the repetition of a <character
string literal> that specifies a <character set specification>
of SQL_IDENTIFIER and an implementation-defined collation
that is sensitive to case, compare equally according to the
comparison rules in Subclause 8.2, "<comparison predicate>".
Note well the "sensitive to case" bits there. Now consider
CREATE TABLE tab (
"foobar" int,
"FooBar" timestamp,
"FOOBAR" varchar(3)
);
We can *not* reject this as containing duplicate column names, else we
have certainly violated rule 27. Now what will you do with
SELECT fooBar FROM tab;
? The spec is unquestionably on the side of "you selected the varchar
column"; historical Postgres practice is on the side of "you selected
the int column". AFAICS a case-insensitive approach would have to
fail with some "I can't identify which column you mean" error. I am
interested to see where you find support for that in the spec...
regards, tom lane
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