>I see no problem with fixing this kind of inconsistency for
>readability, so applied the change.
Thank you.
>Anyway, when sending a patch there are a couple of things which can
>make the life of people looking at what you send easier:
>https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Submitting_a_Patch Yes, I will read.
>One problem that I noted with the patch sent on this thread is that it
>does not directly apply on the git repository. Folks on -hackers are
>mainly used to diffs generated by git. So first I would recommend
>that you set up a git repository of the tree, say with that:
>git clone
https://git.postgresql.org/git/postgresql.git I will make use.
>Generating a patch can be done with git in a couple of ways from the
>cloned repository, say:
>1) git diff
>2) git format-patch
>Both can be applied with a simple "patch -p1" command or even the more
>advanced "git am", still the latter is kind of picky.
Thanks for the hints.
>The code of Postgres is complex, so usually there are reasons why
>things are done the way they are, and it is important to not be afraid
>to ask questions. Also, making the subject of the emails you send
>explicative enough is important. Please note pgsql-hackers has a lot
>of traffic, and this helps some people in filtering out threads they
>are not interested in.
Well, my experience with pgsql-hackers,
haven't been good.
Ask questions, about the code,
have not had good acceptance..
Best regards.
Ranier Vilela