On 1/15/24 12:17 PM, Pavel Stehule wrote:
po 15. 1. 2024 v 11:11 odesílatel PavelTurk <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> napsal: On 1/15/24 12:05 PM, Pavel Stehule wrote:Hi po 15. 1. 2024 v 11:00 odesílatel PavelTurk <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> napsal: Hello all, Currently PostgreSQL doesn't support data change delta tables. For example, it doesn't support this type of query: SELECT * FROM NEW TABLE ( INSERT INTO phone_book VALUES ( 'Peter Doe', '555-2323' ) ) AS t PostgreSQL has RETURNING that provides only a subset of this functionality. So I suggest to add support for data change delta tables. Because this feature is more powerful and it is included in the SQL Standard. This is the wrong mailing list - probably you should send your proposal to pgsql-hackers.I sent message to pgsql-hackers https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/b85900eb-9e3c-e358-aa8f-5a27b30c17e7%40gmail.com <https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/b85900eb-9e3c-e358-aa8f-5a27b30c17e7%40gmail.com> but got no answer. I decided that my message was ignored because I used wrong mailing list.The community development is based on patches. If you propose some feature, usually you should implement it. Probably nobody will implement it instand you.I am Java developer - I wish, but I can't I am sorry, but you cannot expect, so somebody will accept your proposal extra seriously. Proposing some feature is a simple thing, but implementing some not trivial feature requires hundreds of hours of development.
To tell the truth I find it rather strange. I know that there is a big difference between proposing some feature and implementing it. But all projects I came across with work this way - you as a user come and propose a feature. The developers of the project consider your issue and either accept it to implement or decline it.
You can check the work on features for Postgres https://commitfest.postgresql.org/ <https://commitfest.postgresql.org/> and I don't think so there is a lot of free capacity for implementing some new features partially redundant to already supported features. Regards Pavel Best regards, Pavel
