maybe we need a keyword DOS|UNIX or perhaps TEXT|BINARY to tell postgresql
to pick DOS style or UNIX style line endings... 

krishna

-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Blakeley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, April 08, 2000 12:57 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [GENERAL] Re: newline character handling


>  From: "Sampath, Krishna" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Subject: newline character handling
>  Date: Fri, 7 Apr 2000 15:49:58 -0400
>
>  As I tried, using COPY, to import a few flat files created under Windows
>  into postgresql running on a Linux machine, I discovered that:
>  * If the last field in your record is a string, postgresql imports it,
but
>  keeps the ^M as part of the text string.
>  * If the last field is numeric, postgresql refuses to import that line
>  (because of the ^M, the field is not recognized as a number)
>
>  Once I stripped the ^M, the data bulkloaded without a problem. Perhaps
COPY
>  should be smarter and recognize the DOS-style line endings?

I'm ok with this for numerics, but against it for text. Why? Because 
I work with some binary data, and I wouldn't want the mysterious 
problem of not being able to COPY a line containing a record that's 
_supposed_ to end in ^M.

-- Mike

Reply via email to