2010/1/29 Scott Frankel <leknarf@xxxxxxxxxxx>: > > Hi all, > What's the proper way to store directory path strings in a table, especially > ones with backslashes like windows? > I'm currently using a prepared statement with bind value. Do I need to > pre-parse all user entries to identify any backslash characters before > passing the string to my insert statement? > Searches through the documentation turned up references > to escape_string_warning (boolean) and standard_conforming_strings > (boolean). I'm not sure I'll have access to server side config. > Thanks in advance! > Scott > > eg: > CREATE TABLE foo ( > foo_id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, > name VARCHAR(32) UNIQUE NOT NULL, > dirpath text DEFAULT NULL); > > INSERT INTO foo (name, dirpath) VALUES ('bar', 'c:\windows\path\to\bar'); > --> WARNING: nonstandard use of \\ in a string literal explicetely set ON the standard_conforming_string in the postgresql.conf *but* take care it don't break your application. INSERT INTO foo (name, dirpath) VALUES ('bar', 'c:\windows\path\to\bar'); > > > > -- Cédric Villemain -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general