12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
717fa274d1 Support use of function argument names to identify which actual arguments
match which function parameters.  The syntax uses AS, for example
	funcname(value AS arg1, anothervalue AS arg2)

Pavel Stehule
2009-10-08 02:39:25 +00:00
Tom Lane
8205258fa6 Adopt Bob Jenkins' improved hash function for hash_any(). This changes the
contents of hash indexes (again), so bump catversion.

Kenneth Marshall
2009-02-09 21:18:28 +00:00
Tom Lane
517ae4039e Code review for function default parameters patch. Fix numerous problems as
per recent discussions.  In passing this also fixes a couple of bugs in
the previous variadic-parameters patch.
2008-12-18 18:20:35 +00:00
Tom Lane
a9d5f30be3 Restore enforce_generic_type_consistency's pre-8.3 behavior of allowing an
actual argument type of ANYARRAY to match an argument declared ANYARRAY,
so long as ANYELEMENT etc aren't used.  I had overlooked the fact that this
is a possible case while fixing bug #3852; but it is possible because
pg_statistic contains columns declared ANYARRAY.  Per gripe from Corey Horton.
2008-12-14 19:45:52 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
455dffbb73 Default values for function arguments
Pavel Stehule, with some tweaks by Peter Eisentraut
2008-12-04 17:51:28 +00:00
Tom Lane
b8fab2411d Add pg_typeof() function.
Brendan Jurd
2008-11-03 17:51:13 +00:00
Tom Lane
d89737d31c Support "variadic" functions, which can accept a variable number of arguments
so long as all the trailing arguments are of the same (non-array) type.
The function receives them as a single array argument (which is why they
have to all be the same type).

It might be useful to extend this facility to aggregates, but this patch
doesn't do that.

This patch imposes a noticeable slowdown on function lookup --- a follow-on
patch will fix that by adding a redundant column to pg_proc.

Pavel Stehule
2008-07-16 01:30:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
89c0a87fda The original implementation of polymorphic aggregates didn't really get the
checking of argument compatibility right; although the problem is only exposed
with multiple-input aggregates in which some arguments are polymorphic and
some are not.  Per bug #3852 from Sokolov Yura.
2008-01-11 18:39:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
b4349519c1 Fix a thinko in my patch of a couple months ago for bug #3116: it did the
wrong thing when inlining polymorphic SQL functions, because it was using the
function's declared return type where it should have used the actual result
type of the current call.  In 8.1 and 8.2 this causes obvious failures even if
you don't have assertions turned on; in 8.0 and 7.4 it would only be a problem
if the inlined expression were used as an input to a function that did
run-time type determination on its inputs.  Add a regression test, since this
is evidently an under-tested area.
2007-05-01 18:53:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
108fe47301 Aggregate functions now support multiple input arguments. I also took
the opportunity to treat COUNT(*) as a zero-argument aggregate instead
of the old hack that equated it to COUNT(1); this is materially cleaner
(no more weird ANYOID cases) and ought to be at least a tiny bit faster.
Original patch by Sergey Koposov; review, documentation, simple regression
tests, pg_dump and psql support by moi.
2006-07-27 19:52:07 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
7f4f42fa10 Clean up CREATE FUNCTION syntax usage in contrib and elsewhere, in
particular get rid of single quotes around language names and old WITH ()
construct.
2006-02-27 16:09:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
e3b1b6c0cd Aggregates can be polymorphic, using polymorphic implementation functions.
It also works to create a non-polymorphic aggregate from polymorphic
functions, should you want to do that.  Regression test added, docs still
lacking.  By Joe Conway, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
2003-07-01 19:10:53 +00:00