Guillaume Lelarge írta:
> Le 15/07/2010 17:48, Joshua D. Drake a écrit :
>
>> On Thu, 2010-07-15 at 16:20 +0100, Simon Riggs wrote:
>>
>>> On Thu, 2010-07-15 at 11:05 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
>>>
>>>> Simon Riggs <simon@2ndQuadrant.com> writes:
>>>>
>>>>> The biggest turn off that most people experience when using PostgreSQL
>>>>> is that psql does not support memorable commands.
>>>>>
>>>>> I would like to implement the following commands as SQL, allowing them
>>>>> to be used from any interface.
>>>>>
>>>>> SHOW TABLES
>>>>> SHOW COLUMNS
>>>>> SHOW DATABASES
>>>>>
>>>> This has been discussed before, and rejected before. Please see
>>>> archives.
>>>>
>>> Many years ago. I think it's worth revisiting now in light of the number
>>> of people now joining the PostgreSQL community and the greater
>>> prevalence other ways of doing it. The world has changed, we have not.
>>>
>>> I'm not proposing any change in function, just a simpler syntax to allow
>>> the above information to be available, for newbies.
>>>
>>> Just for the record, I've never ever met anyone that said "Oh, this \d
>>> syntax makes so much sense. I'm a real convert to Postgres now you've
>>> shown me this". The reaction is always the opposite one; always
>>> negative. Which detracts from our efforts elsewhere.
>>>
>> I have to agree with Simon here. \d is ridiculous for the common user.
>>
>> SHOW TABLES, SHOW COLUMNS makes a lot of sense. Just has something like
>> DESCRIBE TABLE foo makes a lot more sense than \d.
>>
>>
>
> And would you add the complete syntax? I mean:
>
> SHOW [OPEN] TABLES [FROM db_name] [LIKE 'pattern']
>
> I'm wondering what one can do with the [FROM db_name] clause :)
>
I think it's related to making this work: SELECT * FROM db.schema.table;
Best regards,
Zoltán Böszörményi
--
----------------------------------
Zoltán Böszörményi
Cybertec Schönig & Schönig GmbH
Gröhrmühlgasse 26
A-2700 Wiener Neustadt, Austria
Web: http://www.postgresql-support.de http://www.postgresql.at/