On Tue Nov 01, 2016 at 10:19:24PM -0400, Richard Hipp wrote:
> On 11/1/16, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > The documentation for partial indexes (section 3.2) lists "=, <, >, <=,
> > >=, <>, or IN" as operators that will trigger the use of an
> > index WHERE c IS NOT NULL.
> >
> > It
On 11/1/16, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> The documentation for partial indexes (section 3.2) lists "=, <, >, <=,
> >=, <>, or IN" as operators that will trigger the use of an
> index WHERE c IS NOT NULL.
>
> It seems to me that LIKE should also be in that list, given that it
> will also
Mark Lawrence wrote:
> The documentation for partial indexes (section 3.2) lists "=, <, >, <=,
> >=, <>, or IN" as operators that will trigger the use of an
> index WHERE c IS NOT NULL.
>
> It seems to me that LIKE should also be in that list, given that it
> will also only match when c is not nul
Hello all,
The documentation for partial indexes (section 3.2) lists "=, <, >, <=,
>=, <>, or IN" as operators that will trigger the use of an
index WHERE c IS NOT NULL.
It seems to me that LIKE should also be in that list, given that it
will also only match when c is not null.
I can force the
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