Thread
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Re: Casting, again
Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2000-05-15T18:57:27Z
Tom Lane writes: > I've noticed in other cases that it's willing to do implicit > conversion to text from practically anything. That strikes me as a > bug, or at least pretty darn unintuitive. Is this behavior > intentional, and if so what's the rationale? Well, I'm sure you know my stance on these things by now, but let me add one last thing: What I'm missing from the type system is a governing strategy. On the one hand there is strong typing, on the other hand implicit casting across the board, but not when you would actually want it. This is usually where programming language paradigms clash, but note that programming language design in the last two decades has clearly been moving to one of two things: either strong and strict typing or no typing at all. I'm not saying I like strict like Java were you can't pass a literal `5' as a `short int' argument without complaints but strict as in a string is a string, a date is a date, a point is a point, a number is a number. I would go as far as saying that if you try to insert a 5 in a text field then this should be an error, you must write '5'. Surely some might claim that this is an inconvenience. Indeed, this is inconveniencing me because possible errors in string processing or even system logic are silently dropped under the table. Nobody ever got carpal tunnel syndrome because of two extra quotes, and if the SQL is machine-generated then fixing the program is the best thing in the long run anyway. The previous paragraph agrees with SQL (see section 9.2). -- Peter Eisentraut Sernanders väg 10:115 peter_e@gmx.net 75262 Uppsala http://yi.org/peter-e/ Sweden
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Re: Casting, again
Raul Chirea <raul@brahms.ro> — 2000-05-17T00:02:17Z
Your pg_excelencies, Peter Eisentraut wrote: > I would go as far as saying that if you try to insert a 5 in a text field > then this should be an error, you must write '5'. Surely some might claim > that this is an inconvenience. Indeed, this is inconveniencing me because > possible errors in string processing or even system logic are silently > dropped under the table. Nobody ever got carpal tunnel syndrome because of > two extra quotes, and if the SQL is machine-generated then fixing the > program is the best thing in the long run anyway. Did you think to a system with some abstract types (like numeric, char, date, etc.) and fizical types within the abstract types (i.e. abstract numeric type holds physical integer type, physical float type, phisical numeric type), and the only implicit cast that parser does to be between phisical types whithin the same abstract type ? Raul.