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Abuhujair Javed
Postgres FD Implementation
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8a25ec84
Commit
8a25ec84
authored
Mar 17, 2002
by
Tom Lane
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Improve documentation about array I/O representation.
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0f2fbbba
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doc/src/sgml/array.sgml
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doc/src/sgml/array.sgml
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8a25ec84
<!-- $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/array.sgml,v 1.
19 2002/01/20 22:19:55 petere
Exp $ -->
<!-- $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/array.sgml,v 1.
20 2002/03/17 19:59:57 tgl
Exp $ -->
<chapter id="arrays">
<title>Arrays</title>
...
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@@ -22,8 +22,9 @@ CREATE TABLE sal_emp (
As shown, an array data type is named by appending square brackets
(<literal>[]</>) to the data type name of the array elements.
The above query will create a table named
<structname>sal_emp</structname> with a <type>text</type> string
(<structfield>name</structfield>), a one-dimensional array of type
<structname>sal_emp</structname> with columns including
a <type>text</type> string (<structfield>name</structfield>),
a one-dimensional array of type
<type>integer</type> (<structfield>pay_by_quarter</structfield>),
which represents the employee's salary by quarter, and a
two-dimensional array of <type>text</type>
...
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@@ -35,7 +36,7 @@ CREATE TABLE sal_emp (
Now we do some <command>INSERT</command>s. Observe that to write an array
value, we enclose the element values within curly braces and separate them
by commas. If you know C, this is not unlike the syntax for
initializing structures.
initializing structures.
(More details appear below.)
<programlisting>
INSERT INTO sal_emp
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@@ -66,7 +67,7 @@ SELECT name FROM sal_emp WHERE pay_by_quarter[1] <> pay_by_quarter[2];
</programlisting>
The array subscript numbers are written within square brackets.
<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> uses the
By default
<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> uses the
<quote>one-based</quote> numbering convention for arrays, that is,
an array of <replaceable>n</> elements starts with <literal>array[1]</literal> and
ends with <literal>array[<replaceable>n</>]</literal>.
...
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@@ -99,7 +100,7 @@ SELECT schedule[1:2][1:1] FROM sal_emp WHERE name = 'Bill';
schedule
--------------------
{{
"meeting"
},{""}}
{{
meeting
},{""}}
(1 row)
</programlisting>
...
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@@ -144,11 +145,17 @@ UPDATE sal_emp SET pay_by_quarter[1:2] = '{27000,27000}'
those already present, or by assigning to a slice that is adjacent
to or overlaps the data already present. For example, if an array
value currently has 4 elements, it will have five elements after an
update that assigns to
array[5]. Currently, enlargement in this
fashion is only allowed for one-dimensional arrays, not
update that assigns to
<literal>array[5]</>. Currently, enlargement in
this
fashion is only allowed for one-dimensional arrays, not
multidimensional arrays.
</para>
<para>
Array slice assignment allows creation of arrays that do not use one-based
subscripts. For example one might assign to <literal>array[-2:7]</> to
create an array with subscript values running from -2 to 7.
</para>
<para>
The syntax for <command>CREATE TABLE</command> allows fixed-length
arrays to be defined:
...
...
@@ -168,7 +175,9 @@ CREATE TABLE tictactoe (
Actually, the current implementation does not enforce the declared
number of dimensions either. Arrays of a particular element type are
all considered to be of the same type, regardless of size or number
of dimensions.
of dimensions. So, declaring number of dimensions or sizes in
<command>CREATE TABLE</command> is simply documentation, it does not
affect runtime behavior.
</para>
<para>
...
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@@ -248,19 +257,55 @@ SELECT * FROM sal_emp WHERE pay_by_quarter **= 10000;
</para>
</note>
<formalpara>
<title>Array input and output syntax.</title>
<para>
The external representation of an array value consists of items that
are interpreted according to the I/O conversion rules for the array's
element type, plus decoration that indicates the array structure.
The decoration consists of curly braces (<literal>{</> and <literal>}</>)
around the array value plus delimiter characters between adjacent items.
The delimiter character is usually a comma (<literal>,</>) but can be
something else: it is determined by the <literal>typdelim</> setting
for the array's element type. (Among the standard datatypes provided
in the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> distribution, type
<literal>box</> uses a semicolon (<literal>;</>) but all the others
use comma.) In a multidimensional array, each dimension (row, plane,
cube, etc.) gets its own level of curly braces, and delimiters
must be written between adjacent curly-braced entities of the same level.
You may write whitespace before a left brace, after a right
brace, or before any individual item string. Whitespace after an item
is not ignored, however: after skipping leading whitespace, everything
up to the next right brace or delimiter is taken as the item value.
</para>
</formalpara>
<formalpara>
<title>Quoting array elements.</title>
<para>
As shown above, when writing an array
literal
value you may write double
As shown above, when writing an array value you may write double
quotes around any individual array
element. You <emphasis>must</> do so if the element value would otherwise
confuse the array-value parser. For example, elements containing curly
braces, commas, double quotes, backslashes, or white space must be
double-quoted. To put a double quote or backslash in an array element
value, precede it with a backslash.
braces, commas (or whatever the delimiter character is), double quotes,
backslashes, or leading white space must be double-quoted. To put a double
quote or backslash in an array element value, precede it with a backslash.
Alternatively, you can use backslash-escaping to protect all data characters
that would otherwise be taken as array syntax or ignorable white space.
</para>
</formalpara>
<para>
The array output routine will put double quotes around element values
if they are empty strings or contain curly braces, delimiter characters,
double quotes, backslashes, or white space. Double quotes and backslashes
embedded in element values will be backslash-escaped. For numeric
datatypes it is safe to assume that double quotes will never appear, but
for textual datatypes one should be prepared to cope with either presence
or absence of quotes. (This is a change in behavior from pre-7.2
<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> releases.)
</para>
<tip>
<para>
Remember that what you write in an SQL query will first be interpreted
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