On Thu, 2011-06-30 at 12:28 +0200, Florian Pflug wrote:
> Well, arrays are containers, and we need two values to construct a range,
What about empty ranges? What about infinite ranges?
It seems quite a bit more awkward to shoehorn ranges into an array than
to use a real type (even if it's intermediate and otherwise useless).
> Hm, I guess. I'm sill no huge fan of RANGEINPUT, but if we prevent
> it from being used as a column type and from being used as an argument
> type, then I guess it's workable...
>
> Btw, what happened to the idea of making RANGE(...) a special syntactic
> construct instead of a normal function call? Did we discard that for its
> intrusiveness, or were there other reasons?
It has not been discarded; as far as I'm concerned it's still on the
table. The main advantage is that it doesn't require an intermediate
type, and that requiring a cast (or some specification of the range
type) might be a little more natural. The downside is that, well, it's
new syntax, and there's a little inertia there.
But if it's actually better, we should do it. If an intermediate type
seems to be problematic, or if people think it's strange to require
casting, then I think this is reasonable.
Regards,Jeff Davis