Commit 9dc12ef5 authored by Tom Lane's avatar Tom Lane

Oops, missed some < and > that need to be &lt; and &gt; ...

parent 0fb864f1
<!--
$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/xindex.sgml,v 1.9 2000/03/28 02:53:02 tgl Exp $
$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/xindex.sgml,v 1.10 2000/03/28 02:59:55 tgl Exp $
Postgres documentation
-->
......@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'btree';
impose a strict ordering on keys, lesser to greater. Since
<productname>Postgres</productname> allows the user to define operators,
<productname>Postgres</productname> cannot look at the name of an operator
(eg, ">" or "<") and tell what kind of comparison it is. In fact,
(eg, "&gt;" or "&lt;") and tell what kind of comparison it is. In fact,
some access methods don't impose any ordering at all. For example,
<acronym>R-tree</acronym>s express a rectangle-containment relationship,
whereas a hashed data structure expresses only bitwise similarity based
......@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'btree';
needs some consistent way of taking a qualification in your query,
looking at the operator and then deciding if a usable index exists. This
implies that <productname>Postgres</productname> needs to know, for
example, that the "<=" and ">" operators partition a
example, that the "&lt;=" and "&gt;" operators partition a
<acronym>B-tree</acronym>. <productname>Postgres</productname>
uses strategies to express these relationships between
operators and the way they can be used to scan indices.
......@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'btree';
<note>
<para>
Strictly speaking, this routine can return a negative
number (< 0), 0, or a non-zero positive number (> 0).
number (&lt; 0), 0, or a non-zero positive number (&gt; 0).
</para>
</note>
</para>
......@@ -427,11 +427,11 @@ CREATE OPERATOR = (
FROM pg_am am, pg_opclass opcl, complex_ops_tmp c
WHERE amname = 'btree' AND
opcname = 'complex_abs_ops' AND
c.oprname = '<';
c.oprname = '&lt;';
</programlisting>
Now do this for the other operators substituting for the "1" in the
third line above and the "<" in the last line. Note the order:
third line above and the "&lt;" in the last line. Note the order:
"less than" is 1, "less than or equal" is 2, "equal" is 3, "greater
than or equal" is 4, and "greater than" is 5.
</para>
......
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