"Greg Sabino Mullane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Here's my thoughts on the matter: > More than one period throws an error (something pleasant, mentioning > that we do not quite support cross-database queries yet).
The just-committed implementation doesn't throw an error, but silently discards name fragments to the left of the last two --- for example, foo.bar.baz is silently treated as bar.baz. This could probably be improved, but I haven't quite figured out how psql deals with error recovery... Otherwise I agree with your comments, except for > \d baz* Shows all tables starting with "baz", in all available schemas Make that "shows visible tables whose names begin with baz". There is a subtle difference. > \d *.baz* Same as above This shows tables whose names begin with baz, in any schema in the database --- without regard to visibility. > \d *.* Same as plain old \d (which is actually a special case now) \d without an argument is still a special case: it transforms to \dtvs with no argument. Other than that little usability kluge, the general rule is that for any object-type x, \dx is the same as \dx *, which is *not* the same as \dx *.* ... the former shows all visible objects, the latter all objects in the database. > The current behavior can be a bit confusing, in that some functions > have implicit wildcards (\dt and friends) and some do not (\d). As of cvs tip, all the \d family take wildcards. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]