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50 lines
2.2 KiB
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From zalman@netcom.com Tue Mar 16 18:01:18 1999
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Tue, 16 Mar 1999 14:55:33 -0800 (PST)
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From: Zalman Stern <zalman@netcom.com>
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Message-Id: <199903162255.OAA28174@netcom15.netcom.com>
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Subject: Re: [SQL] How match percent sign in SELECT using LIKE?
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To: maillist@candle.pha.pa.us (Bruce Momjian)
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Date: Tue, 16 Mar 1999 14:55:33 -0800 (PST)
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Cc: zalman@netcom.com, herouth@oumail.openu.ac.il, pgsql-sql@postgreSQL.org
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In-Reply-To: <199903162226.RAA20904@candle.pha.pa.us> from "Bruce Momjian" at Mar 16, 99 05:26:09 pm
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Status: ROr
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Bruce Momjian wrote:
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> That is also an excellent idea. Just convert their escape to \ inside
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> the parser. Of course, they still have to use \\ to get a \, as in any
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> string. Great idea.
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You can even make it fully compliant if you want. (There are of course
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backward compatibility problems. I'm not sure what the Postgres policy is
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on this.)
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- If the escape character is backslash, do nothing.
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- Otherwise, turn all backslashes in the string to double backslashes.
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- If the escape character is not set, stop here.
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- Turn all occurences of the escape character into a backslash except
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where the escape character is doubled, where it should be made into a
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single occurence.
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(Optionally, if "\n" is just an 'n' character, you can handle double
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occurences of the escape character by turning the first one into a
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backslash.)
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Probably the best bet for PostgreSQL programmers is to always code Like
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clauses with an ESCAPE '\' (or however its written).
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I really wish they'd chosen a character other than underscore for the
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"match one" wildcard... Is there any standard practice for seperating words
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in table names?
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-Z-
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