On Mon, Feb 28, 2005 at 12:50:25PM +0100, Tommy Svensson wrote: > - I've used Oracle, DB2, Mimer, and HSQLDB before, and my experience > with these led me > to beleive that SQL was case insensitive. In fact, I was so sure of it > that a case problem > just never occured to me. Case isn't a problem if you don't quote identifiers because unquoted identifiers will be folded to lower case, both when you create them and then later when you reference them. For example, if you create a table with this command: CREATE TABLE XYZ (I INTEGER); then the system folds XYZ and I to lower case: \dt List of relations Schema | Name | Type | Owner --------+--------------+-------+------- public | xyz | table | mfuhr \d xyz Table "public.xyz" Column | Type | Modifiers --------+---------+----------- i | integer | The following queries should all work (not an all-inclusive list): SELECT I FROM XYZ; SELECT i FROM xyz; SELECT I FROM Xyz; select i from xyz; sEleCt i fRoM xYz; But if you quote identifiers when you create them, then they'll be created with the exact case you specified and you'll need to quote them whenever you use them: CREATE TABLE "XYZ" ("I" INTEGER); \dt List of relations Schema | Name | Type | Owner --------+--------------+-------+------- public | XYZ | table | mfuhr \d "XYZ" Table "public.XYZ" Column | Type | Modifiers --------+---------+----------- I | integer | SELECT "I" FROM "XYZ"; -- works SELECT I FROM XYZ; -- fails -- Michael Fuhr http://www.fuhr.org/~mfuhr/ ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster