On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 5:29 AM Dmitry Belyavsky <beldmit@gmail.com> wrote: > I've applied your patch. > From my point of view, there is no major difference between case and chain if here. > Neither case nor ifs allow extracting the common code to separate function - just because there seem to be no identical pieces of code.
Hi Dmitry,
The documentation doesn't build[1], due to invalid XML. Since I'm here, here is some proof-reading of the English in the documentation:
<para> - A <firstterm>label</firstterm> is a sequence of alphanumeric characters - and underscores (for example, in C locale the characters - <literal>A-Za-z0-9_</literal> are allowed). Labels must be less than 256 bytes - long. + A <firstterm>label</firstterm> is a sequence of characters. Labels must be + less than 256 symbols long. Label may contain any character supported by Postgres
"fewer than 256 characters in length", and "<productname>PostgreSQL</productname>"
+ except <literal>\0</literal>. If label contains spaces, dots, lquery modifiers,
"spaces, dots or lquery modifiers,"
+ they may be <firstterm>escaped</firstterm>. Escaping can be done either by preceeding + backslash (<literal>\\</literal>) symbol, or by wrapping the label in whole in double + quotes (<literal>"</literal>). Initial and final unescaped whitespace is stripped.
"Escaping can be done with either a preceding backslash [...] or by wrapping the whole label in double quotes [...]."
</para>
+ During converting text into internal representations, wrapping double quotes
"During conversion to internal representation, "
+ and escaping backslashes are removed. During converting internal + representations into text, if the label does not contain any special
"During conversion from internal representation to text, "
+ symbols, it is printed as is. Otherwise, it is wrapped in quotes and, if + there are internal quotes, they are escaped with backslash. The list of special
"escaped with backslashes."
+ <para> + Examples: <literal>42</literal>, <literal>"\\42"</literal>, + <literal>\\4\\2</literal>, <literal> 42 </literal> and <literal> "42" + </literal> will have the similar internal representation and, being
"will all have the same internal representation and,"
+ converted from internal representation, will become <literal>42</literal>. + Literal <literal>abc def</literal> will turn into <literal>"abc + def"</literal>. </para>