On Wed, Apr 30, 2025 at 5:15 AM Peter Eisentraut <pe...@eisentraut.org> wrote: > > On 28.04.25 18:56, Álvaro Herrera wrote: > > On 2025-Apr-23, Nathan Bossart wrote: > > > >> On Mon, Mar 24, 2025 at 11:37:20AM +0100, Álvaro Herrera wrote: > > > >>> I'd add a note about these two things to the open items page, and wait > >>> to see if we get some of these limitations fixed, so that if we don't, > >>> we remember to note this limitation in the documentation. > >> > >> Are we still waiting on something for this, or should we proceed with the > >> documentation changes? It doesn't seem tremendously urgent, but I noticed > >> it's been about a month since the last message on this thread. > > > > I've edited the Open Items page to disclaim my responsibility from this > > item, since this comes from virtual generated columns which is not my > > turf. I think we should just document the current state of affairs; we > > can come back with further code improvements during the next cycle. > > Here is a proposed patch that includes some text about virtual generated > columns and also fixes up a small mistake in the previous patch > (confused identity and generated columns) and improves the wording and > formatting a bit more.
If I were going to quibble, I'd probably rewrite the second paragraph as + Changing the type of an existing column will normally cause the entire table + and its indexes to be rewritten. + As an exception, when changing the type of an existing column, if the <literal>USING</literal> clause does not change the column contents and the old type is either binary coercible to the new type or an unconstrained domain over the new type, a table rewrite is not - needed. However, indexes must always be rebuilt unless the system + needed. However, indexes will still need to be rebuilt unless the system can verify that the new index would be logically equivalent to the existing one. For example, if the collation for a column has been changed, an index rebuild is required because the new sort order might be different. However, in the absence of a collation change, a column can be changed from <type>text</type> to <type>varchar</type> (or vice versa) without rebuilding the indexes - because these data types sort identically. Table and/or index + because these data types sort identically. But otherwise this LGTM. Robert Treat https://xzilla.net