On Wed, Jun 06, 2007 at 11:23:13PM +0100, James Mansion wrote:
> mark@mark.mielke.cc wrote:
> >What is a real life example where an intelligent and researched
> >database application would issue a like or ilike query as their
> >primary condition in a situation where they expected very high
> >selectivity?
> In my case the canonical example is to search against textual keys
> where the search is performed automatically if the user hs typed
> enough data and paused. In almost all cases the '%' trails, and I'm
> looking for 'starts with' in effect. usually the search will have a
> specified upper number of returned rows, if that's an available
> facility. I realise in this case that matching against the index
> does not allow the match count unless we check MVCC as we go, but I
> don't see why another thread can't be doing that.
I believe PostgreSQL already considers using the index for "starts
with", so this wasn't part of the discussion for me. Sorry that this
wasn't clear.
Cheers,
mark
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