Thread
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Re: tsearch comments
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-22T22:58:35Z
> Oleg: Can you search your memory why txt2txtidx possibly should not be > marked as "iscachable"? Well I now see where the problem is, the function does not always have to return the same if the arguments are the same (the data might have changed and there may be more or less matching entries). Any hints how to overcome this? Regards, Bjoern
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Re: tsearch comments
Oleg Bartunov <oleg@sai.msu.su> — 2003-01-23T04:10:34Z
On Wed, 22 Jan 2003, [iso-8859-1] BjЖrn Metzdorf wrote: > > Oleg: Can you search your memory why txt2txtidx possibly should not be > > marked as "iscachable"? > > Well I now see where the problem is, the function does not always have to > return the same if the arguments are the same (the data might have changed > and there may be more or less matching entries). Any hints how to overcome > this? No way, Bjoern. Think about stemming, for example. > > Regards, > Bjoern > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? > > http://archives.postgresql.org > Regards, Oleg _____________________________________________________________ Oleg Bartunov, sci.researcher, hostmaster of AstroNet, Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow University (Russia) Internet: oleg@sai.msu.su, http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/ phone: +007(095)939-16-83, +007(095)939-23-83
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Re: tsearch comments
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-23T08:07:36Z
> > Well I now see where the problem is, the function does not always have to > > return the same if the arguments are the same (the data might have changed > > and there may be more or less matching entries). Any hints how to overcome > > this? > > No way, Bjoern. Think about stemming, for example. Do index functions always have to be marked "iscachable" ? Btw, the error message was confusing. It said that the function has to be marked "isImmutable", but there is no such attribute, instead "iscachable" had to be used. This seems to be a bug. Regards, Bjoern
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Re: tsearch comments
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-23T10:42:18Z
> Do index functions always have to be marked "iscachable" ? > > Btw, the error message was confusing. It said that the function has to be > marked "isImmutable", but there is no such attribute, instead "iscachable" > had to be used. This seems to be a bug. The manual says: "All functions and operators used in an index definition must be immutable, that is, their results must depend only on their input arguments and never on any outside influence (such as the contents of another table or the current time). This restriction ensures that the behavior of the index is well-defined. To use a user-defined function in an index, remember to mark the function immutable when you create it." Well, in the tsearch case the results don't depend on any influence outside of the function. The stemmer is integrated in the function and we don't use the current time nor another table. So it should be safe to mark that function "iscachable" or when it is fixed "isimmutable", am I right? Regards, Bjoern
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Re: tsearch comments
Oleg Bartunov <oleg@sai.msu.su> — 2003-01-23T11:08:05Z
Bjorn, you'll get problem with your approach not to create additional columns if index will not used ! In our approach sequential scan will use txtidx column. I don't understand what error you're comment. Probably I miss something. We are working on new version of tsearch and alpha version will be available next week. Are you sure 'iscacheability' should be configureable somehow ? Teodor, what do you think ? Oleg On Thu, 23 Jan 2003, Bjorn Metzdorf wrote: > > Do index functions always have to be marked "iscachable" ? > > > > Btw, the error message was confusing. It said that the function has to be > > marked "isImmutable", but there is no such attribute, instead "iscachable" > > had to be used. This seems to be a bug. > > The manual says: > > "All functions and operators used in an index definition must be immutable, > that is, their results must depend only on their input arguments and never > on any outside influence (such as the contents of another table or the > current time). This restriction ensures that the behavior of the index is > well-defined. To use a user-defined function in an index, remember to mark > the function immutable when you create it." > > Well, in the tsearch case the results don't depend on any influence outside > of the function. The stemmer is integrated in the function and we don't use > the current time nor another table. So it should be safe to mark that > function "iscachable" or when it is fixed "isimmutable", am I right? > > Regards, > Bjoern > Regards, Oleg _____________________________________________________________ Oleg Bartunov, sci.researcher, hostmaster of AstroNet, Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow University (Russia) Internet: oleg@sai.msu.su, http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/ phone: +007(095)939-16-83, +007(095)939-23-83
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Re: tsearch comments
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-23T11:28:21Z
> txtidx column. I don't understand what error you're comment. I think "iscachable" and "isimmutable" are mixed up. "CREATE FUNTION" does not accept "isimmutable". > Probably I miss something. We are working on new version of tsearch > and alpha version will be available next week. Are you sure Great news! Any comments on the new version? Snowball support? txt2txtidx without morphology? Regards, Bjoern
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Re: tsearch comments
Teodor Sigaev <teodor@stack.net> — 2003-01-23T11:36:48Z
> Yes, I don't see that problem either. The locale and the configuration of > dictionaries do not change while running the postmaster, do they? I forgot parser too. Parser and dictionaries will be changed after gmake install (contrib/tsearch) :), without restarting postmaster. In common case, we can't set iscachable option to txt2txtidx, but if you know what you do you can set it. May be some comments must be included in README. Björn Metzdorf wrote: >>txtidx column. I don't understand what error you're comment. > > > I think "iscachable" and "isimmutable" are mixed up. "CREATE FUNTION" does > not accept "isimmutable". > > >>Probably I miss something. We are working on new version of tsearch >>and alpha version will be available next week. Are you sure > > > Great news! Any comments on the new version? Snowball support? txt2txtidx > without morphology? Snowball, ISpell.... SQL-level for configure parsers and dictionaries. SQL-level for configure map (which dictionary for each type of lexem). Just wait :) -- Teodor Sigaev teodor@stack.net
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Re: tsearch comments
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-23T11:49:41Z
> > Yes, I don't see that problem either. The locale and the configuration of > > dictionaries do not change while running the postmaster, do they? > I forgot parser too. > > Parser and dictionaries will be changed after gmake install (contrib/tsearch) > :), without restarting postmaster. > > In common case, we can't set iscachable option to txt2txtidx, but if you know > what you do you can set it. May be > some comments must be included in README. Ok, but then it should be sufficient to recreate the txt2txtidx function and/or the index after a change of parser and dictionaries. So generally spoken, the index function approach to tsearch works, if you take care of that. I gladly recreate the function and/or index from time to time, if I can do without that additional column, bloated dump and slow trigger. This is very good news, as this is a very easy approach to having an easy to use fulltextsearch in postgresql. > > Great news! Any comments on the new version? Snowball support? txt2txtidx > > without morphology? > Snowball, ISpell.... > SQL-level for configure parsers and dictionaries. > SQL-level for configure map (which dictionary for each type of lexem). > Just wait :) Wow, sounds great! Regards, Bjoern
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I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Alan T. Miller <amiller@hollywood101.com> — 2003-01-23T12:26:31Z
As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years working with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave in the way it did with MySQL. I got used to just defining a column as a timestamp and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a row was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I accomplish something simular inside the database, or am I stuck populating the field in some manner as in the following example update blah blah blah timestamp = NOW() Thanks, Alan
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-23T12:32:09Z
> As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years working > with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave in the > way it did with MySQL. I got used to just defining a column as a timestamp > and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a row > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I accomplish > something simular inside the database, or am I stuck populating the field in > some manner as in the following example There is no such datatype in postgresql. If you just need the current time inserted on INSERT and not on UPDATE, then you can declare that column with "default now()". Else you will need to install a trigger, then you can have exactly the same behaviour as with mysql. Regards, Bjoern
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
codeWarrior <gpatnude@adelphia.net> — 2003-01-23T13:20:53Z
postgreSQL actually has a better implementation of timestamps.... In mySQL -- You can have only 1 timestamp field... In postgreSQL -- you can have as many "create_dt" timestamp default 'now()' fields as you want and on an insert -- they ALL get stamped whereas in mySQL --ONLY 1 COLUMN gets updated.... ""Alan T. Miller"" <amiller@hollywood101.com> wrote in message news:003a01c2c2da$a90d10a0$6e01a8c0@webdev... > As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years working > with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave in the > way it did with MySQL. I got used to just defining a column as a timestamp > and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a row > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I accomplish > something simular inside the database, or am I stuck populating the field in > some manner as in the following example > > update blah blah blah timestamp = NOW() > > Thanks, > > Alan > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command > (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to majordomo@postgresql.org)
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Re: tsearch comments
Björn Metzdorf <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> — 2003-01-23T15:09:27Z
> Ok, but then it should be sufficient to recreate the txt2txtidx function > and/or the index after a change of parser and dictionaries. So generally > spoken, the index function approach to tsearch works, if you take care of > that. I gladly recreate the function and/or index from time to time, if I > can do without that additional column, bloated dump and slow trigger. > > This is very good news, as this is a very easy approach to having an easy to > use fulltextsearch in postgresql. I talked a bit more with Oleg and Teodor about this index function approach and we came to the conclusion that it is safe to use (if you take care of the above), but it might be a bit slower than the original column based approach. That it because the used operators are defined with RECHECK, and with the index function approach the RECHECK is against an (expensive) function instead of "raw" data in a column. Btw. the "iscachable" has another advantage, it seems to really speed up the search. I have done tests again 250000 entries, mostly nicknames based on fantasy (so the english stemmer has not much to do), and the first search for a name takes about 0.5 - 2.5 seconds whereas all subsequent searches for the same name (even with fresh inserted data) take less than 0.1 seconds. Or does this have nothing to do with "iscachable"? Regards, Bjoern
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Re: tsearch comments
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-01-23T15:14:05Z
"Bjorn Metzdorf" <bm@turtle-entertainment.de> writes: > Btw, the error message was confusing. It said that the function has to be > marked "isImmutable", but there is no such attribute, instead "iscachable" > had to be used. This seems to be a bug. Actually the preferred syntax in 7.3 is CREATE FUNCTION ... LANGUAGE foo IMMUTABLE For awhile during 7.3 development you had to write WITH (isImmutable) but we changed the syntax to be more SQL-spec-compatible. This error message seems not to have gotten fixed --- thanks for pointing it out. regards, tom lane
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Richard Huxton <dev@archonet.com> — 2003-01-23T17:48:17Z
> As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years working > with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave in the > way it did with MySQL. Much as I like MySQL, it can sometimes be a little *too* helpful. > I got used to just defining a column as a timestamp > and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a > row > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? When you create the table do something like: CREATE TABLE foo ( bar timestamp DEFAULT now(), ... ); You can of course do this with any column-type and value. See the SQL-reference for details. - Richard Huxton
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Will Trillich <will@serensoft.com> — 2003-01-23T18:13:17Z
On Thu, Jan 23, 2003 at 04:26:31AM -0800, Alan T. Miller wrote: > As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from > years working with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data > type does not behave in the way it did with MySQL. I got used > to just defining a column as a timestamp and letting the > database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a row > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I > accomplish something simular inside the database, or am I stuck > populating the field in some manner as in the following example > > update blah blah blah timestamp = NOW() triggers or rules can do that with any timestamp (or timestamp(0) -- no partial-seconds) field. here's a "rules" approach: create table _something ( id serial, dat text, freshened timestamp(0), primary key ( id ) ); create view something as select id, dat, freshened from _something; create rule something_add as on insert to something do instead ( insert into _something ( --id, dat, freshened ) values ( --let id take care of itself, NEW.dat, current_timestamp ); ); create rule something_edit as on update to something do instead ( update _something set --id = leave it alone, dat = NEW.dat, freshened = current_timestamp where id = NEW.id ; ); then you can just insert into something (dat) values ('yada yada'); update something set dat = 'here we go' where id = 23978; and "freshened" takes care of itself. -- There are 10 kinds of people: ones that get binary, and ones that don't. will@serensoft.com http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ ! -
Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Medi Montaseri <medi.montaseri@intransa.com> — 2003-01-23T19:31:32Z
Of course the proposed solution solves the INSERTs....you can also set a trigger that on UPDATE set the value to 'now()' dev@archonet.com wrote: >>As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years working >>with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave in the >>way it did with MySQL. >> >> > >Much as I like MySQL, it can sometimes be a little *too* helpful. > > > >>I got used to just defining a column as a timestamp >>and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a >>row >>was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? >> >> > >When you create the table do something like: > >CREATE TABLE foo ( > bar timestamp DEFAULT now(), > ... >); > >You can of course do this with any column-type and value. See the >SQL-reference for details. > >- Richard Huxton > >---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- >TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster > >
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Matthew Nuzum <cobalt@bearfruit.org> — 2003-01-23T20:02:33Z
One word of caution, I *think* you want quotes around the 'now()' statement in your table definition. Otherwise your default value will be the instant the *table* was created, not the instant your insert happened. I too had an adjustment period when switching from MySQL to postgres. However, I think you'll find that if you use a RULE to implement this feature you will soon become addicted to PostgreSQL's advanced feature set. You can learn more about rules by going to http://www.ca.postgresql.org/docs/aw_pgsql_book/node124.html where you can find a brief description and example, or for more detail, you can go to http://www.ca.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/7.2/postgres/rules-insert .html I attained all of my database knowledge through hands on experience; much of it on MySQL. Switching to PostgreSQL was somewhat traumatic because it has a lot more power and a lot more features. Once I got a handle on things like Views, Triggers and Rules, I have become somewhat dependant on them and I haven't been able to use MySQL for anything more than the most basic of applications. I guess that's just a warning... There may be no turning back. -- Matthew Nuzum www.bearfruit.org cobalt@bearfruit.org > -----Original Message----- > From: Björn Metzdorf [mailto:bm@turtle-entertainment.de] > Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 7:32 AM > To: Alan T. Miller; pgsql-general@postgresql.org > Subject: Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field > > > As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years > working > > with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave in > the > > way it did with MySQL. I got used to just defining a column as a > timestamp > > and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a > row > > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I > accomplish > > something simular inside the database, or am I stuck populating the > field > in > > some manner as in the following example > > There is no such datatype in postgresql. If you just need the current time > inserted on INSERT and not on UPDATE, then you can declare that column > with > "default now()". Else you will need to install a trigger, then you can > have > exactly the same behaviour as with mysql. > > Regards, > Bjoern
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Luke Pascoe <luke.p@kmg.co.nz> — 2003-01-23T20:57:04Z
Why not just use a DEFAULT NOW()? ie: CREATE TABLE blah ( time TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW() ); I know it works for DATETIME types, don't know about TIMESTAMP but I assume it would be the same. Luke. ----- Original Message ----- From: "will trillich" <will@serensoft.com> To: <pgsql-general@postgresql.org> Sent: Friday, January 24, 2003 7:13 AM Subject: Re: [GENERAL] I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field > On Thu, Jan 23, 2003 at 04:26:31AM -0800, Alan T. Miller wrote: > > As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from > > years working with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data > > type does not behave in the way it did with MySQL. I got used > > to just defining a column as a timestamp and letting the > > database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a row > > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I > > accomplish something simular inside the database, or am I stuck > > populating the field in some manner as in the following example > > > > update blah blah blah timestamp = NOW() > > triggers or rules can do that with any timestamp (or timestamp(0) > -- no partial-seconds) field. here's a "rules" approach: > > create table _something ( > id serial, > dat text, > freshened timestamp(0), > primary key ( id ) > ); > > create view something as > select > id, > dat, > freshened > from > _something; > > create rule something_add as > on insert to something > do instead ( > insert into _something ( > --id, > dat, > freshened > ) values ( > --let id take care of itself, > NEW.dat, > current_timestamp > ); > ); > > create rule something_edit as > on update to something > do instead ( > update _something set > --id = leave it alone, > dat = NEW.dat, > freshened = current_timestamp > where > id = NEW.id > ; > ); > > then you can just > > insert into something (dat) values ('yada yada'); > update something set dat = 'here we go' where id = 23978; > > and "freshened" takes care of itself. > > -- > There are 10 kinds of people: > ones that get binary, and ones that don't. > > will@serensoft.com > http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! > http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! > > Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're > probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ ! > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? > > http://www.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/faq.html > > -
Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Joseph S <jks@selectacast.net> — 2003-01-23T23:03:41Z
See http://www.brasileiro.net:8080/postgres/cookbook/view-one-recipe.adp?recipe_id=10 Matthew Nuzum wrote: > One word of caution, I *think* you want quotes around the 'now()' > statement in your table definition. Otherwise your default value will be > the instant the *table* was created, not the instant your insert > happened. > > I too had an adjustment period when switching from MySQL to postgres. > However, I think you'll find that if you use a RULE to implement this > feature you will soon become addicted to PostgreSQL's advanced feature > set. > > You can learn more about rules by going to > http://www.ca.postgresql.org/docs/aw_pgsql_book/node124.html where you > can find a brief description and example, or for more detail, you can go > to > http://www.ca.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/7.2/postgres/rules-insert > .html > > I attained all of my database knowledge through hands on experience; > much of it on MySQL. Switching to PostgreSQL was somewhat traumatic > because it has a lot more power and a lot more features. Once I got a > handle on things like Views, Triggers and Rules, I have become somewhat > dependant on them and I haven't been able to use MySQL for anything more > than the most basic of applications. I guess that's just a warning... > There may be no turning back. > > -- > Matthew Nuzum > www.bearfruit.org > cobalt@bearfruit.org > =20 > > >>-----Original Message----- >>From: Bj=F6rn Metzdorf [mailto:bm@turtle-entertainment.de] >>Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 7:32 AM >>To: Alan T. Miller; pgsql-general@postgresql.org >>Subject: Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field >>=20 >> >>>As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from years >> >>working >> >>>with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data type does not behave > > in > >>the >> >>>way it did with MySQL. I got used to just defining a column as a >> >>timestamp >> >>>and letting the database throw the latest time stamp in there > > whenever a > >>row >> >>>was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I >> >>accomplish >> >>>something simular inside the database, or am I stuck populating the >> >>field >>in >> >>>some manner as in the following example >> >>=20 >>There is no such datatype in postgresql. If you just need the current > > time > >>inserted on INSERT and not on UPDATE, then you can declare that column >>with >>"default now()". Else you will need to install a trigger, then you can >>have >>exactly the same behaviour as with mysql. >>=20 >>Regards, >>Bjoern > > > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? > > http://archives.postgresql.org
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Will Trillich <will@serensoft.com> — 2003-01-24T08:56:19Z
On Fri, Jan 24, 2003 at 09:57:04AM +1300, Luke Pascoe wrote: > Why not just use a DEFAULT NOW()? > ie: > CREATE TABLE blah ( > time TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW() > ); > > I know it works for DATETIME types, don't know about TIMESTAMP > but I assume it would be the same. great for INSERT, but rather inert on UPDATE. create table _gribnif ( created timestamp default current_timestamp, modified timestamp, other text, ); create view gribnif ... create rule gribnif_edit as on update to gribnif do instead ( update _gribnif set MODIFIED = CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, other = NEW.other where id = NEW.id ; ); -- There are 10 kinds of people: ones that get binary, and ones that don't. will@serensoft.com http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ !
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Lincoln Yeoh <lyeoh@pop.jaring.my> — 2003-01-24T09:47:14Z
At 03:02 PM 1/23/03 -0500, Matthew Nuzum wrote: >One word of caution, I *think* you want quotes around the 'now()' >statement in your table definition. Otherwise your default value will be >the instant the *table* was created, not the instant your insert >happened. Would plain: default 'now' work? If it does (it seems to), what is the difference? Link.
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Dennis Gearon <gearond@cvc.net> — 2003-01-24T12:11:12Z
What's the difference between 'now()' and 'current_timestamp' ? will trillich wrote: > > On Fri, Jan 24, 2003 at 09:57:04AM +1300, Luke Pascoe wrote: > > Why not just use a DEFAULT NOW()? > > ie: > > CREATE TABLE blah ( > > time TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW() > > ); > > > > I know it works for DATETIME types, don't know about TIMESTAMP > > but I assume it would be the same. > > great for INSERT, but rather inert on UPDATE. > > create table _gribnif ( > created timestamp default current_timestamp, > modified timestamp, > other text, > ); > > create view gribnif ... > > create rule gribnif_edit as > on update to gribnif > do instead ( > update _gribnif set > MODIFIED = CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, > other = NEW.other > where > id = NEW.id > ; > ); > > -- > There are 10 kinds of people: > ones that get binary, and ones that don't. > > will@serensoft.com > http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! > http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! > > Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're > probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ ! > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate > subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@postgresql.org so that your > message can get through to the mailing list cleanly -- Carpe Dancem ;-) ----------------------------------------------------------------- Remember your friends while they are alive ----------------------------------------------------------------- Sincerely, Dennis Gearon
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-01-24T15:55:26Z
Dennis Gearon <gearond@cvc.net> writes: > What's the difference between 'now()' and 'current_timestamp' ? None AFAIK. now() is historical Postgres usage, CURRENT_TIMESTAMP is the SQL-spec-mandated spelling of the same functionality. CURRENT_TIMESTAMP with an argument does something a bit different, though. http://www.ca.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/7.3/postgres/functions-datetime.html#FUNCTIONS-DATETIME-CURRENT regards, tom lane
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Will Trillich <will@serensoft.com> — 2003-01-24T19:36:13Z
On Fri, Jan 24, 2003 at 10:55:26AM -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > Dennis Gearon <gearond@cvc.net> writes: > > What's the difference between 'now()' and 'current_timestamp' ? > > None AFAIK. now() is historical Postgres usage, CURRENT_TIMESTAMP is > the SQL-spec-mandated spelling of the same functionality. > > CURRENT_TIMESTAMP with an argument does something a bit different, > though. > > http://www.ca.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/7.3/postgres/functions-datetime.html#FUNCTIONS-DATETIME-CURRENT the one caveat is outlined at the bottom of that very page: All the date/time data types also accept the special literal value now to specify the current date and time. Thus, the following three all return the same result: SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP; SELECT now(); SELECT TIMESTAMP 'now'; Note: You do not want to use the third form when specifying a DEFAULT clause while creating a table. The system will convert now to a timestamp as soon as the constant is parsed, so that when the default value is needed, the ##TIME OF THE TABLE CREATION## would be used! The first two forms will not be evaluated until the default value is used, because they are function calls. Thus they will give the desired behavior of defaulting to the time of row insertion. [emphasis mine] so careful using "now" when you mean to use "now()". or better yet, "current_timestamp" for consistency. -- There are 10 kinds of people: ones that get binary, and ones that don't. will@serensoft.com http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ !
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Matthew Nuzum <cobalt@bearfruit.org> — 2003-01-26T20:04:12Z
The difference is when now() gets interpreted into a date. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong... If you create a table at 15:00 Jan 26, 2003 and you use an unquoted now() as the default value for a field, then each record will have it's default value as 15:00 Jan 26, 2003. If you quote the now(), then the default value for each newly created record will be now() which is interpreted at the moment the record is created. I've used different rdbms so please forgive me if I'm documenting the characteristics of a different system. -- Matthew Nuzum www.bearfruit.org cobalt@bearfruit.org > -----Original Message----- > From: Lincoln Yeoh [mailto:lyeoh@pop.jaring.my] > Sent: Friday, January 24, 2003 4:47 AM > To: Matthew Nuzum; 'Björn Metzdorf'; 'Alan T. Miller'; pgsql- > general@postgresql.org > Subject: Re: [GENERAL] I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field > > At 03:02 PM 1/23/03 -0500, Matthew Nuzum wrote: > > >One word of caution, I *think* you want quotes around the 'now()' > >statement in your table definition. Otherwise your default value will be > >the instant the *table* was created, not the instant your insert > >happened. > > Would plain: default 'now' work? If it does (it seems to), what is the > difference? > > Link.
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-01-26T22:00:36Z
"Matthew Nuzum" <cobalt@bearfruit.org> writes: > The difference is when now() gets interpreted into a date. Someone > please correct me if I'm wrong... > If you create a table at 15:00 Jan 26, 2003 and you use an unquoted > now() as the default value for a field, then each record will have it's > default value as 15:00 Jan 26, 2003. You're wrong... now() is a function call and will not be folded into a constant. AFAIR, the only case that does get folded to a constant is ... mycol timestamp default timestamp 'now' since "timestamp 'now'" is Postgres' notation for a literal constant of a specific datatype (timestamp in this case). The string 'now' is immediately fed to the timestamp datatype's input converter, and behold it produces the current time, which is then stored as a timestamp constant. The notation 'now()' that various people have suggested is in fact invalid, being not a function call but a literal --- but it seems that the timestamp input converter is sloppy about detecting trailing garbage in its input string. You should get a "Bad timestamp external representation" error from it, but at the moment you don't. You can easily check the behavior for yourself rather than relying on other people's assertions. For example: regression=# create table t1 (f1 timestamp default now(), regression(# f2 timestamp default 'now', regression(# f3 timestamp default timestamp 'now'); CREATE TABLE regression=# \d t1 Table "public.t1" Column | Type | Modifiers --------+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------- f1 | timestamp without time zone | default now() f2 | timestamp without time zone | default 'now' f3 | timestamp without time zone | default '2003-01-26 16:51:11.246954'::timestamp without time zone and even more directly: regression=# insert into t1 default values; INSERT 1003028 1 regression=# insert into t1 default values; INSERT 1003029 1 regression=# select * from t1; f1 | f2 | f3 ----------------------------+----------------------------+---------------------------- 2003-01-26 16:58:13.173561 | 2003-01-26 16:58:13.173561 | 2003-01-26 16:51:11.246954 2003-01-26 16:58:14.323162 | 2003-01-26 16:58:14.323162 | 2003-01-26 16:51:11.246954 (2 rows) (BTW, the reason 'now' without "timestamp" in front works is that this is not a timestamp literal but a text literal, which will be coerced to timestamp at runtime.) regards, tom lane -
Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Lincoln Yeoh <lyeoh@pop.jaring.my> — 2003-01-27T04:09:43Z
At 05:00 PM 1/26/03 -0500, Tom Lane wrote: >(BTW, the reason 'now' without "timestamp" in front works is that this >is not a timestamp literal but a text literal, which will be coerced >to timestamp at runtime.) Is it known at the moment which of those methods the Postgresql team are aiming to continue supporting for the near/medium future? e.g. current_timestamp is guaranteed. now() for the forseeable future. 'now' for the next few versions. Thanks, Link.
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-01-27T04:20:52Z
Lincoln Yeoh <lyeoh@pop.jaring.my> writes: > At 05:00 PM 1/26/03 -0500, Tom Lane wrote: >> (BTW, the reason 'now' without "timestamp" in front works is that this >> is not a timestamp literal but a text literal, which will be coerced >> to timestamp at runtime.) > Is it known at the moment which of those methods the Postgresql team are > aiming to continue supporting for the near/medium future? AFAIK there are no plans to break any of them; though certainly CURRENT_TIMESTAMP is the most future-proof, being spec-mandated. regards, tom lane
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Will Trillich <will@serensoft.com> — 2003-01-27T05:59:12Z
On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 05:00:36PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > now() is a function call and will not be folded into a constant. > You can easily check the behavior for yourself rather than relying on > other people's assertions. note -- this is ALWAYS a good idea. especially when it's *me* giving the assertion :) reminds me of a high-school prof i had. he'd stop in the middle of a lesson and ask if anybody knew the meaning of a word he'd just used ("mote", for example); if not, he'd supply a definition (small fly) and go on. later we'd have a vocabulary test; any answers that parroted what he'd said were always marked wrong, as he'd just made them up off-the-cuff. (mote is a particle, as in gritty dust.) double-check for yourself. don't take anybody's word for it. KNOW, don't trust. the best way to find out, is to FIND OUT. -- There are 10 kinds of people: ones that get binary, and ones that don't. will@serensoft.com http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ ! -
Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Lincoln Yeoh <lyeoh@pop.jaring.my> — 2003-01-27T13:58:47Z
At 11:59 PM 1/26/03 -0600, will trillich wrote: >On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 05:00:36PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > > now() is a function call and will not be folded into a constant. > > > You can easily check the behavior for yourself rather than relying on > > other people's assertions. > >note -- this is ALWAYS a good idea. especially when it's *me* >giving the assertion :) It's still good hear from the developers what they think the behaviour should be, and would be. If the devs, docs and software agree then it'll be fine to use the feature. Otherwise if possible, it might be a better idea to use a different feature to achieve what I want. Don't want to use a behaviour will soon be deprecated/changed. Of course, it's not good to pester you guys for everything either. But current_timestamp vs now() vs 'now' would probably be a popular feature enough to clarify. Hope this doesn't waste too much bandwidth ;). Link.
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Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2003-01-27T18:03:37Z
FYI, I usually prefer triggers in cases where you want to modify/check the row as it is being processed, and rules for modifying other rows/tables as part of row processing, but both do work. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- will trillich wrote: > On Thu, Jan 23, 2003 at 04:26:31AM -0800, Alan T. Miller wrote: > > As someone who is just getting started with PostygreSQL from > > years working with MySQL, it appears that the timestamp data > > type does not behave in the way it did with MySQL. I got used > > to just defining a column as a timestamp and letting the > > database throw the latest time stamp in there whenever a row > > was updated. Is there anything simular in PosgreSQL? How can I > > accomplish something simular inside the database, or am I stuck > > populating the field in some manner as in the following example > > > > update blah blah blah timestamp = NOW() > > triggers or rules can do that with any timestamp (or timestamp(0) > -- no partial-seconds) field. here's a "rules" approach: > > create table _something ( > id serial, > dat text, > freshened timestamp(0), > primary key ( id ) > ); > > create view something as > select > id, > dat, > freshened > from > _something; > > create rule something_add as > on insert to something > do instead ( > insert into _something ( > --id, > dat, > freshened > ) values ( > --let id take care of itself, > NEW.dat, > current_timestamp > ); > ); > > create rule something_edit as > on update to something > do instead ( > update _something set > --id = leave it alone, > dat = NEW.dat, > freshened = current_timestamp > where > id = NEW.id > ; > ); > > then you can just > > insert into something (dat) values ('yada yada'); > update something set dat = 'here we go' where id = 23978; > > and "freshened" takes care of itself. > > -- > There are 10 kinds of people: > ones that get binary, and ones that don't. > > will@serensoft.com > http://sourceforge.net/projects/newbiedoc -- we need your brain! > http://www.dontUthink.com/ -- your brain needs us! > > Looking for a firewall? Do you think smoothwall sucks? You're > probably right... Try the folks at http://clarkconnect.org/ ! > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? > > http://www.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/faq.html > -- Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us pgman@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 359-1001 + If your life is a hard drive, | 13 Roberts Road + Christ can be your backup. | Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073 -
Re: I was spoiled by the MySQL timestamp field
Andrew Sullivan <andrew@libertyrms.info> — 2003-01-27T23:09:26Z
On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 05:00:36PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > "Matthew Nuzum" <cobalt@bearfruit.org> writes: > > The difference is when now() gets interpreted into a date. Someone > > please correct me if I'm wrong... > now() is a function call and will not be folded into a constant. I know it's not really related, but I think it might be worth noting here, also, that now() is (was? I don't have anything later than 7.2 handy for testing at the moment) resolves to the beginning of the transaction. If you need time to move forward during your transaction, you need timeofday(). A -- ---- Andrew Sullivan 204-4141 Yonge Street Liberty RMS Toronto, Ontario Canada <andrew@libertyrms.info> M2P 2A8 +1 416 646 3304 x110