On Thu, 20 Oct 2005, Doug Quale wrote:
> "Guy Rouillier" <guyr@masergy.com> writes:
>
>> Doug Quale wrote:
>>>
>>> # select 'a'::char(8) = 'a '::char(8);
>>>  ?column?
>>> ----------
>>>  t
>>> (1 row)
>>>
>>> Trailing blanks aren't significant in fixed-length strings, so the
>>> question is whether Postgresql treats comparison of varchars right.
>>
>> This result is being misinterpreted.
>>
>> select length('a'::char(8)) ==> 1
>> select length('a '::char(8)) ==> 1
>>
>> So it isn't that the two different strings are comparing equal.  The
>> process of casting them to char(8) is trimming the blanks, so by the
>> time they become fixed length strings, they are indeed equal.
>
> Huh??? What version of PG are you using?  On 7.4.9,
>
>
> test=# select length('a'::char(8));
> length
> --------
>      8
> (1 row)
>
> test=# select length('a '::char(8));
> length
> --------
>      8
> (1 row)
>
> The truncation you describe would simply be wrong.
ams=# select length('a '::char(8));
  length
--------
       1
(1 row)
ams=# select version();
                                version
----------------------------------------------------------------------
  PostgreSQL 8.0.2 on i386-portbld-freebsd4.11, compiled by GCC 2.95.4
(1 row)
ams=#
----
Marc G. Fournier           Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
Email: scrappy@hub.org           Yahoo!: yscrappy              ICQ: 7615664