Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.ba...@enterprisedb.com> writes: > Consider following sequence of commands
> create type complex as (r float8, i float8); > create type quad as (c1 complex, c2 complex); > create temp table quadtable(f1 int, q quad); > insert into quadtable (f1, q.c1.r, q.c2.i) values(44,55,66); > While parsing the INSERT query, we parse the query with three columns and > three values in the target list, but during rewriting we combine q.c1.r and > q.c2.i into a single column in the form of FieldStore structure. In > Postgres-XC, we deparse these parse trees, to be sent to other PostgreSQL > servers. Well, basically you have a broken design there. We are not going to adopt a restriction that post-rewrite trees are necessarily exactly representable as SQL, so there are going to be corner cases where this approach fails. > The assertion is added by commit 858d1699. The notes for the commit have > following paragraph related to FieldStore deparsing. > I chose to represent an assignment ArrayRef as "array[subscripts] := > source", > which is fairly reasonable and doesn't omit any information. However, > FieldStore is problematic because the planner will fold multiple > assignments > to fields of the same composite column into one FieldStore, resulting > in a > structure that is hard to understand at all, let alone display > comprehensibly. > So in that case I punted and just made it print the source > expression(s). > So, there doesn't seem to be any serious reason behind the restriction. If you have a proposal for some reasonable way to print the actual meaning of the expression (and a patch to do it), we can certainly consider changing that code. I don't think it's possible to display it as standard SQL, though. The ArrayRef case is already not standard SQL. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers