Josh Berkus <j...@agliodbs.com> writes:
> I just noticed that if I use a tstzrange for convenience, a standard
> btree index on a timestamp won't get used for it.  Example:

> table a (
>       id int,
>       val text,
>       ts timestamptz
> );
> index a_ts on a(ts);

> SELECT * FROM a WHERE ts <@ tstzrange('2013-01-01','2013-01-01 00:10:00')

> ... will NOT use the index a_ts.

Well, no.  <@ is not a btree-indexable operator.

What I find more disturbing is that this is what I get from the example
in HEAD:

regression=# explain SELECT * FROM a WHERE ts <@ 
tstzrange('2013-01-01','2013-01-01 00:10:00');
ERROR:  XX000: type 1184 is not a range type
LOCATION:  range_get_typcache, rangetypes.c:1451

Haven't traced through it to determine exactly what's happening, but
isn't this a legitimate usage?  And if it isn't, surely a more
user-facing error ought to be getting thrown somewhere upstream of here.

                        regards, tom lane


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