On Mon, May 30, 2016 at 10:53 AM, Volker Boehm <volker@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The reason for using the similarity function in place of the '%'-operator is > that I want to use different similarity values in one query: > > select name, street, zip, city > from addresses > where name % $1 > and street % $2 > and (zip % $3 or city % $4) > or similarity(name, $1) > 0.8 I think the best you can do through query writing is to use the most-lenient setting in all places, and then refilter to get the less lenient cutoff: select name, street, zip, city from addresses where name % $1 and street % $2 and (zip % $3 or city % $4) or (name % $1 and similarity(name, $1) > 0.8) If it were really important to me to get maximum performance, what I would do is alter/fork the pg_trgm extension so that it had another operator, say %%%, with a hard-coded cutoff which paid no attention to the set_limit(). I'm not really sure how the planner would deal with that, though. Cheers, Jeff -- Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-performance