Re: Incomplete or misleading explanation of the data types formathematical operators - Mailing list pgsql-docs

From Sergei Agalakov
Subject Re: Incomplete or misleading explanation of the data types formathematical operators
Date
Msg-id 4d9d1083-b876-f90c-ace6-95df64153ecb@gmail.com
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In response to Re: Incomplete or misleading explanation of the data types formathematical operators  (Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us>)
Responses Re: Incomplete or misleading explanation of the data types formathematical operators  (Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us>)
List pgsql-docs
On 3/5/2020 7:29 PM, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 29, 2020 at 07:35:18PM +0000, PG Doc comments form wrote:
>> The following documentation comment has been logged on the website:
>>
>> Page: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/functions-math.html
>> Description:
>>
>> "The bitwise operators work only on integral data types, whereas the others
>> are available for all numeric data types. "
>> Many math operators silently convert integral data types to double for
>> calculations, so the result will not be the same data type as what was
>> provided.
>> select pg_typeof(10^2::bigint),pg_typeof(10^2::numeric)
>> select pg_typeof(|/25::int), pg_typeof(|/25::numeric)
>> select pg_typeof(10*10::bigint), pg_typeof(10*10::numeric)
>>
>> Multiplication preserves data type, exponentiation silently converts bigint
>> to double, but preserves numeric data type, square root silently converts
>> both int and numeric types to double.
>> The best would be to explain this behaivior of operators like it was done
>> for mathematical functions.
> Uh, how does this relate to bitwise operators?  Why would we mention
> type changes for things like exponentiation in the bitwise operator
> documentation section?
>
This chapter is named "Mathematical Functions and Operators". The table 
9.4. is named "Mathematical Operators". I don't see on this page any 
section "Bitwise operators" so I don't really understand your complaint.
How do you understand the phrase "The bitwise operators work only on 
integral data types, whereas the others are available for all numeric 
data types. "  in the context of the table "Mathematical Operators"?
I understand it that all other mathematical operators except bitwise 
operators do exist for all numeric data type.
In what place by your opinion documentation should describe that some 
mathematical operators exist only for some numeric data types but not 
others?
I have given examples of such operators - exponentiation and square root 
aren't defined for all numeric data types and do hidden conversion of 
the data types.



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