Peter Geoghegan <p...@bowt.ie> writes: > I think that the argument Tom is making is that it might be useful to > have statistics on the expression regardless of this -- the expression > may be interesting in some general sense. For example, one can imagine > the planner creating a plan with a hash aggregate rather than a group > aggregate, but only when statistics on an expression are available, > somehow.
Right. For instance, "select sum(x) from ... group by y+z" is only suitable for hash aggregation if we can predict that there's a fairly small number of distinct values of y+z. This makes it useful to have stats on the expression y+z, independently of whether any related index actually gets used in the plan. regards, tom lane