> > Dear Stephan, > > > > For the class I have in mind, there are no corner cases, just concepts and > > > basic practice. They are not going to be db developers, not even computer > > > > So no string comparisons? I know that's a mostly unused corner case and > > all, but... ;) > > They survive to the idea that text/date/... are "basic" types in SQL. > Maybe I'm lucky... they could prefer java references with new/equals...;-) > > If I take your example about details of && vs AND semantics, while > teaching "programming concepts" I'm not going to discuss the fact that && > is shortcut by the evaluator, as this is very specific. > > I'm not planing my students to know what "i=++i+i++;" could mean.
And I wouldn't expect that in a programming concepts course. But, if you're going to (for example) say that, "preincrement and postincrement work exactly as in C," you've got to realize that there's a chance a student will know that the i++ + ++i is undefined and expect it to be undefined in the language you're talking about. That's the problem with using shorthand phrases like "exactly in <X>" without the "except ..." ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org