Scott Marlowe wrote:
This whole discussion is reminding me of one of my personal mantras, and that is that relying on "artifacts" of behaviour is generally a bad idea. For instance, many databases accept != for not equal, but the sql standard quite clearly says it's <>. If you're relying on case folding meaning that you don't have to consistently use the same capitalization when referring to variables, table names, people, or anything else, you're asking for trouble down the line, and for little or no real gain today. I know that a lot of times we are stuck with some commercial package that we can't do anything to fix, so I'm not aiming this comment at the average dba, but at the developer. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org/
Yea, this is a commercial package, but it's actually doing it right. Since it doesn't know how a user will name a table or column, it always calls them as quoted strings in upper case which is standards compliant, but doesn't work with PG. So if a user names a table 55 and mine, it calls "55 AND MINE" and for foo, it calls "FOO". Looks like they did it right to me.
Randall