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Given that this issue is a violation of SQL compatibility, shouldn't
there really be an option to turn off interpretation of backslash
characters in string literals as escapes? Maybe as a session variable
of some kind, with a default being set in postgresql.conf?
On Jan 14, 2005, at 4:43 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
> "aboster" <aboster@at-sd.com> writes:
>> Since MS-SQL & Oracle (both via ODBC) work fine with this app, I would
>> suspect the issue is that Postgres is interpreting backslashes as
>> escape
>> characters in situations that the supported databases do not.
>
> Postgres definitely considers backslashes to be escape characters in
> string literals.
>
>> Has anyone run across something like this, and if so, can anything be
>> done
>> given that we don't have the source code of the application in
>> question?
>
> Without the app source code you may be kinda stuck :-(. It's possible
> that you could hack something at the ODBC level, though. Try asking on
> the pgsql-odbc list.
>
> regards, tom lane
>
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- -----------------------------------------------------------
Frank D. Engel, Jr. <fde101@fjrhome.net>
$ ln -s /usr/share/kjvbible /usr/manual
$ true | cat /usr/manual | grep "John 3:16"
John 3:16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten
Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have
everlasting life.
$
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