On Wed, Feb 02, 2011 at 07:48:38PM -0500, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> Brendan Jurd wrote:
> > On 3 February 2011 10:54, Bruce Momjian <br...@momjian.us> wrote:
> > > It seems LIKE is considering the trailing CHAR(10) field spaces as
> > > significant, even though our documentations says:
> > >
> > -- snip --
> > >
> > > It says trailing spaces are not significant for character comparisons
> > > --- the real question is whether LIKE is a comparison. ?Obvioiusly '='
> > > is a comparison, but the system does not treat LIKE as a comparison in
> > > terms of trailing spaces. ?Is that desired behavior?
> > 
> > Interesting.  I would have to say that from the user point of view,
> > LIKE is definitely a comparison, and if the rest of the operators on
> > bpchar ignore whitespace then LIKE ought to as well.
> > 
> > Is the situation the same for regex matches (~ operators)?
> 
> Yes, I think so:
> 
>       test=> SELECT 'a'::char(10) ~ 'a$';
>        ?column?
>       ----------
>        f
>       (1 row)
>       
>       test=> SELECT 'a'::char(10) ~ 'a  *$';
>        ?column?
>       ----------
>        t
>       (1 row)
> 
> -- 
>   Bruce Momjian  <br...@momjian.us>        http://momjian.us
>   EnterpriseDB                             http://enterprisedb.com

In my mind LIKE/~ are pattern matching operators and not a simple
comparison operator. PostgreSQL is doing the right thing in restricting
the somewhat bizarre treatment of trailing spaces to the '=' comparison
function. I can only imagine what would be needed to allow exceptions
to the pattern matching syntax to allow you to actually work with and
match the trailing spaces otherwise.

+10 for leaving the behavior as is.

Regards,
Ken
> 
>   + It's impossible for everything to be true. +
> 
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