From: | "Lane Van Ingen" <lvaningen(at)esncc(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | <pgsql-novice(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Difficulties Storing Case Sensitive DDL Definitions |
Date: | 2005-11-15 21:42:50 |
Message-ID: | EKEMKEFLOMKDDLIALABIKEBFCFAA.lvaningen@esncc.com |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-novice |
We are in the process of converting a legacy application to PostgreSQL,
using Windows 2003, version 8.0.1.
We have been noticing (via pgAdmin) that when we create a view, PostgreSQL
appears to 'flatten' all of our DDL statements to lowercase. Because the
legacy code is messy and undocumented, and because it uses names that are a
mixture of uppercase and lowercase, we felt it would be a better to create a
separate schema with views of the same name as the tables we are converting,
and use the view to return rows to the app that have the mixture of upper-
and lowercase letters it desires.
For instance, here is a field that we tried to create in a view:
as input by our CREATE VIEW statements : updatedTime
as stored in PostgreSQL, and viewed by pgAdmin : updatedtime
The application is issuing a query statement that wants 'updatedTime', like
this:
select updatedTime from <table> ....
In order to overcome this, we created our views like this:
CREATE VIEW <view_name> AS SELECT
updatedTime AS "updatedTime",
:
(etc.)
When trying to query it (via pgAdmin and other tools), we found we had to
quote the field names to avoid syntax errors, like this
select "updatedTime" from <table> ....
This means we have to go back and change all queries in the legacy
application if we use this approach, which is exactly what we were hoping to
avoid.
QUESTION: Is there any way around this behaviour of 'flattening' the case of
schema objects? Don't see any config parms or run-time options that seem to
apply.
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