david.g.johnston@xxxxxxxxx wrote: Thanks. That section makes a valiant attempt to distinguish between "identifier" (as a token in a SQL statement or, say PL/pgSQL source code) and "name" as what the identifier denotes. But (I think) it slips up here: « A convention often used is to write key words in upper case and names in lower case, e.g.: UPDATE my_table SET a = 5; » It should be « to write key words in upper case and unquoted identifiers in lower case », yes? About my search_path ------------- """x""" yes, I was confused—by, for example, this precedent. create table "He said ""dog"", I think."(k int); \d I see this: List of relations Schema | Name | Type | Owner --------+-------------------------+-------+------- u1 | He said "dog", I think. | table | u1 So here the convention is to list the name of the table and not the identifier that denoted the intended name at creation time. The situation is analogous with setting the search_path. I want to talk about schemas. Schemas have names. So in SQL syntax, I must denote these names by writing identifiers. It could have been decided that the proper way to display a search_path is by listing the schema names (just as \d does for tables). But it was decided, instead, to denote the path by the list of identifiers that denote the schema names. This doesn't present a huge usability challenge. But it is, nevertheless, a rule that you have to learn (which I had) and then remember (which I didn't). |