On 12/10/07, Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Erik Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I guess what I don't understand is that given the query
>
> > SELECT COUNT(*)
> > FROM table
> > WHERE some_id=34;
>
> > on a table with the much discussed constraint (34 % 100) = 32 isn't
> > simply evaluated as a one-time filter whenever whatever constraint
> > exclusion code examines child partition tables' constraints.
>
> I'm not sure how else to explain it: the fact that the WHERE clause
> asserts that some operator named "=" will succeed on some_id and 34
> is not sufficient grounds to assume that "some_id % 100" and "34 % 100"
> will give the same result.  Knowing that the "=" operator is a btree
> equality operator gives us latitude to make certain conclusions, but
> not that one, because there is no way to know whether the semantics
> of the particular btree operator class have anything to do with the
> behavior of "%".

Erik is questioning is why it has to assume anything. Why can't it
just execute the expression and find out? On a high level, the
partitioning system looks exactly like partial expression indexes.

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