Robert Haas writes:
> On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 5:41 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
>> I noticed that commit 7e137f846 added functions named max() and min()
>> to pgbench's expression syntax. Unfortunately, these functions have
>> zilch to do with what max() and min() do in SQL. They're actually more
>> like
I noticed that commit 7e137f846 added functions named max() and min()
to pgbench's expression syntax. Unfortunately, these functions have
zilch to do with what max() and min() do in SQL. They're actually more
like the greatest() and least() server-side functions.
Yep.
While I can't imagine
On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 5:41 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
> I noticed that commit 7e137f846 added functions named max() and min()
> to pgbench's expression syntax. Unfortunately, these functions have
> zilch to do with what max() and min() do in SQL. They're actually more
> like the greatest() and least()
I noticed that commit 7e137f846 added functions named max() and min()
to pgbench's expression syntax. Unfortunately, these functions have
zilch to do with what max() and min() do in SQL. They're actually more
like the greatest() and least() server-side functions.
While I can't imagine that we'd