Steve Atkins wrote:
On Aug 28, 2008, at 12:27 PM, Tino Wildenhain wrote:Hi Bill, Bill wrote:The SQL database servers I have worked with cannot use and index for a SELECT of the formSELECT * FROM ATABLE WHERE AFIELD LIKE ?because there is no way to know the location of the wild card until the parameter value is known. InterBase and Firebird allowSELECT * FROM ATABLE WHERE AFIELD STARTING WITH ?which is equivalent to LIKE 'ABC%' and will use an index on AFIELD. Is there a similar syntax in PostgreSQL?Yes, its actually: LIKE 'ABC%' and it will use an index.I think Bill's point is that the planner can't take advantage of that at the time it's planning the query unless it has the string at that point. Something like "STARTING WITH" could be used with prepared statements too.
Ah yes, I now see :-) Seems a general way of hinting statement preparation on the nature of the expected data would be nice. Something like special domain types maybe which have resonable constraints which can be used by the planner. Obviously not so easy solution. Regards Tino
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