Are range_before and range_after commutator operators?

Поиск
Список
Период
Сортировка
От Tom Lane
Тема Are range_before and range_after commutator operators?
Дата
Msg-id 21850.1321484017@sss.pgh.pa.us
обсуждение исходный текст
Ответы Re: Are range_before and range_after commutator operators?  (Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com>)
Список pgsql-hackers
I noticed that << and >> are not marked as commutator operators,
though a naive view of their semantics suggests they should be.
However, I realized that there might be edge cases I wasn't thinking
about, so I went looking in the patch to try to confirm this.  And
I found neither a single line of documentation about it, nor a single
comment in that hairy little nest of unobvious tests that calls itself
range_cmp_bounds.  I am of the opinion that that routine not only
requires a comment, but very possibly a comment longer than the routine
itself.  What's more, if it's this complicated to code, surely it would
be a good idea for the user-facing documentation to explain exactly
what we think before/after mean?

In general, the level of commenting in the rangetypes code seems far short
of what I'd consider acceptable for Postgres code.  I plan to fix some
of that myself, but I do not wish to reverse-engineer what the heck
range_cmp_bounds thinks it's doing.
        regards, tom lane


В списке pgsql-hackers по дате отправления:

Предыдущее
От: Simon Riggs
Дата:
Сообщение: Re: Minor optimisation of XLogInsert()
Следующее
От: Greg Jaskiewicz
Дата:
Сообщение: Re: Configuration include directory