Re: Difference between CAST(v AS t) and v::t
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
To: Lele Gaifax <lele@metapensiero.it>
Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Date: 2017-11-11T16:43:08Z
Lists: pgsql-general
Lele Gaifax <lele@metapensiero.it> writes: > while writing test cases for my SQL pretty printer tool[1], I found what seems > a discrepancy in the "Type Casts" documentation[2]: it states that the two > syntaxes are equivalent, but while They are functionally equivalent ... > EXCLUDE USING gist (CAST(company_id AS text) WITH =, validity WITH &&) > works, the following > EXCLUDE USING gist (company_id::text WITH =, validity WITH &&) > is rejected with the message "syntax error at or near "::"". ... but expression-index syntax has the restriction that you need parentheses around an expression unless it is, or at least looks like, a function call. CAST() looks enough like a function call for this purpose, v::t does not. I think there is relevant documentation for this near CREATE INDEX; it doesn't seem like the province of the typecast docs to explain the weirdnesses of index syntax. regards, tom lane