Arturo Pie Joa <arturotd08@xxxxxxxx> writes: > I have found a strange behavior in postgreSQL when adding columns with > defaults of a domain type in a schema different from public. As the other respondent said, you're confusing the issue by using conflicting names. If you hadn't done that, you'd see this: regression=# create domain mytext as text; CREATE DOMAIN regression=# create table test (co1 mytext default 'some value'); CREATE TABLE regression=# \d+ test Table "public.test" Column | Type | Modifiers | Storage | Stats target | Description --------+--------+----------------------------+----------+--------------+------------- co1 | mytext | default 'some value'::text | extended | | Has OIDs: no which makes it at least slightly clearer what's going on: pg_get_expr is just reporting the base type of the constant. The constant does get cast to the domain type, but that's an implicit cast that's not shown in the decompiled output. You can convince yourself of that by looking directly at the pg_attrdef entry: regression=# select * from pg_attrdef where adrelid = 'test'::regclass; adrelid | adnum | adbin | adsrc ---------+-------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-------------------- 67889 | 1 | {COERCETODOMAIN :arg {CONST :consttype 25 :consttypmod -1 :constcollid 100 :constlen -1 :constbyval false :constisnull false :location 38 :constvalue 14 [ 0 0 0 14 115 111 109 101 32 118 97 108 117 101 ]} :resulttype 67888 :resulttypmod -1 :resultcollid 100 :coercionformat 2 :location -1} | 'some value'::text (1 row) The constant has type 25 (text). The CoerceToDomain node does have mytype (with OID 67888 in this test) as result type, but it isn't shown because it has coercionformat 2 (COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST). BTW, the reason it's done like this is that CoerceToDomain has to be done at runtime: if you were to do an ALTER DOMAIN ADD CONSTRAINT, it's not clear whether or not the constant would still be a valid value of the domain. So we can't just generate a Const node that claims that 'some text' is a value of type mytype. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general