Joe Conway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The difficulty is finding a way to avoid all that extra work without a > very ugly special case kludge just for inserts.
[ thinks a bit ... ] It seems to me that the reason it's painful is exactly that INSERT ... VALUES is a kluge already. We've special-cased the situation where the INSERT's <query expression> is a <table value constructor> with exactly one row --- but actually a <table value constructor> with multiple rows ought to be allowed anywhere you can currently write "SELECT ...". So ideally fixing this would include eliminating the current artificial distinction between two types of INSERT command. I think the place we'd ultimately like to get to involves changing the executor's Result node type to have a list of targetlists and sequence through those lists to produce its results (cf Append --- perhaps while at it, divorce the "gating node" functionality into a different node type). That part seems clear, what's a bit less clear is what the ripple effect on the upstream parser/planner data structures should be. Should *all* occurrences of Query be changed to have a list-of-targetlists? Sounds ugly, and I don't understand what it would mean for any Query other than one representing a VALUES construct. [ thinks some more ... ] Maybe the right place to put the list-of-targetlists functionality is not in Query per se, but in a new type of jointree node. This would localize the impact as far as changing the datastructures go, but I've not thought hard enough about what the impact would actually be. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq