Jeff Davis writes:
> On Wed, 2011-11-16 at 16:41 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
>> I propose adding a step to func_select_candidate
>> that tries to resolve things that way, ie, if all the known-type inputs
>> have the same type, then try assuming that the unknown-type ones are of
>> that type, and see if that leads to a unique match. There actually is a
>> comment in there that claims we do that, but the code it's attached to
>> is really doing something else that involves preferred types within
>> type categories...
>>
>> Thoughts?
> That sounds reasonable to me.
Here's a draft patch (sans doc changes as yet) that extends the
ambiguous-function resolution rules that way. It adds the heuristic at
the very end, at the point where we would otherwise fail, and therefore
it cannot change the system's behavior for any case that didn't
previously draw an "ambiguous function/operator" error. I experimented
with placing the heuristic earlier in func_select_candidate, but found
that that caused some changes in regression test cases, which made me a
bit nervous. Those changes were not clearly worse results, but this
isn't an area that I think we should toy with lightly.
I haven't yet tried again on changing the <@ and @> declarations, but
will do that next.
regards, tom lane
diff --git a/src/backend/parser/parse_func.c b/src/backend/parser/parse_func.c
index 75f1e20475d1c2df628f0a866fc081c601340e98..01ed85b563d23e9288430a76b28aa5a7b2550b74 100644
*** a/src/backend/parser/parse_func.c
--- b/src/backend/parser/parse_func.c
*** func_select_candidate(int nargs,
*** 618,631
Oid *input_typeids,
FuncCandidateList candidates)
{
! FuncCandidateList current_candidate;
! FuncCandidateList last_candidate;
Oid *current_typeids;
Oid current_type;
int i;
int ncandidates;
int nbestMatch,
! nmatch;
Oid input_base_typeids[FUNC_MAX_ARGS];
TYPCATEGORY slot_category[FUNC_MAX_ARGS],
current_category;
--- 618,633
Oid *input_typeids,
FuncCandidateList candidates)
{
! FuncCandidateList current_candidate,
! first_candidate,
! last_candidate;
Oid *current_typeids;
Oid current_type;
int i;
int ncandidates;
int nbestMatch,
! nmatch,
! nunknowns;
Oid input_base_typeids[FUNC_MAX_ARGS];
TYPCATEGORY slot_category[FUNC_MAX_ARGS],
current_category;
*** func_select_candidate(int nargs,
*** 651,659
* take a domain as an input datatype. Such a function will be selected
* over the base-type function only if it is an exact match at all
* argument positions, and so was already chosen by our caller.
*/
for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
! input_base_typeids[i] = getBaseType(input_typeids[i]);
/*
* Run through all candidates and keep those with the most matches on
--- 653,674
* take a domain as an input datatype. Such a function will be selected
* over the base-type function only if it is an exact match at all
* argument positions, and so was already chosen by our caller.
+ *
+ * While we're at it, count the number of unknown-type arguments for use
+ * later.
*/
+ nunknowns = 0;
for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
! {
! if (input_typeids[i] != UNKNOWNOID)
! input_base_typeids[i] = getBaseType(input_typeids[i]);
! else
! {
! /* no need to call getBaseType on UNKNOWNOID */
! input_base_typeids[i] = UNKNOWNOID;
! nunknowns++;
! }
! }
/*
* Run through all candidates and keep those with the most matches on
*** func_select_candidate(int nargs,
*** 749,762
return candidates;
/*
! * Still too many candidates? Try assigning types for the unknown columns.
! *
! * NOTE: for a binary operator with one unknown and one non-unknown input,
! * we already tried the heuristic of looking for a candidate with the
! * known input type on both sides (see binary_oper_exact()). That's
! * essentially a special case of the general algorithm we try next.
*
! * We do this by examining each unknown argument position to see if we can
* determine a "type category" for it. If any candidate has an input
* datatype of STRING category, use STRING category (this bias towards
* STRING is appropriate since unknown-type literals look like strings).
--- 764,779
return candidates;
/*
! * Still too many candidates? Try assigning types for the unknown inputs.
*
! * If there are no unknown inputs, we have no more heuristics that apply,
! * and must fail.
! */
! if (nunknowns == 0)
! return NULL; /* failed to select a best candidate */
!
! /*
! * The next step examines each unknown argument position to see if we can
* determine a "type category" for it. If any candidate has an input
* datatype of STRING category, use STRING category (this bias towards
* STRING is appropriate since unknown-type literals look like