Robert Haas <[email protected]> writes:
> On Mon, Nov 24, 2025 at 11:09 AM Tom Lane <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> The second is getting rid of uses of Pointer for variables where you
>>> might as well use void * directly.  These are actually not that many.

>> ... but not of that.  In particular, I think it's just fine if
>> DatumGetPointer and PointerGetDatum take and return Pointer.

> What's your objection?

We have lots of places where we use trivial typedefs to annotate
what something is.  For instance "text *" is not really different
from "struct varlena *", but I don't think anyone would be in favor
of removing the "text" typedef.  In this case we have decades of
practice using Pointer to annotate something as being a generic
pointer.  I'm in favor of switching it to be "void *" to conform
more closely to modern C semantics, but not of just trying to get
rid of it.  Especially so if the removal is incomplete.  What have
you really accomplished then?

> (I don't have a considered opinion on this particular point, but in
> general I've found that using Pointer seems to make life worse rather
> than better.)

How much of that comes from "char *" versus "void *"?

                        regards, tom lane


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