Alan Hodgson wrote: > On Friday 24 October 2008, "Gauthier, Dave" <dave.gauthier@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> I read in the docs (section 9.7.1) that the backslash... \ ... is the >> default escape char to use in "like" expressions. Yet when I try it, it >> doesn't seem to work the ay I expect. Here's an example... >> >> select name from templates where name like '%\_cont\_%'; >> > > Use double \\ for underscores. I don't know why it's necessary, but it works > here. Here's why. See the documentation for more information: craig=> show standard_conforming_strings; standard_conforming_strings ----------------------------- off (1 row) craig=> SELECT '%\_cont\_%'; WARNING: nonstandard use of escape in a string literal LINE 1: SELECT '%\_cont\_%'; ^ HINT: Use the escape string syntax for escapes, e.g., E'\r\n'. ?column? ---------- %_cont_% (1 row) craig=> SELECT E'%\\_cont\\_%'; ?column? ------------ %\_cont\_% (1 row) craig=> set standard_conforming_strings = 1; SET craig=> SELECT '%\_cont\_%'; ?column? ------------ %\_cont\_% (1 row) -- Craig Ringer -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general