Tom,

I was looking for another approach but didn't come across that array
syntax in my searches (perhaps because it's newer.  Thanks for a
solution.

Now to end my fixation, one last item.  What about the case of a null
or empty param value- is there a way to assign a condition value that
Postgres will ignore when processing the query?

This syntax results in a seq scan:   WHERE fielda = Coalesce(param, fielda)
because it applies only to non-nulls

Is there another way to write this- perhaps using your array syntax on
an empty array?  Basically I'd PG to ignore the condition just as it
ignores   WHERE 1 = 1


On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 8:31 AM, Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Postgres User" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > My users are developers and the goal was to accept a simple
>  > comma-delimited list of string values as a function's input parameter.
>  >  The function would then parse this input param into a valid regex
>  > expression.
>
>  Why are you fixated on this being a regex?  If you aren't actually
>  trying to expose regex capabilities to the users, you'll just be having
>  to suppress a bunch of strange behaviors for special characters.
>
>  ISTM that the best solution is to use an array-of-text parameter,
>  along the lines of
>
>         where name = any (array['Smith', 'Jones', ...])
>
>  For what you're doing, you'd not actually want the array[] syntax,
>  it would look more like
>
>         where name = any ('{Smith,Jones}'::text[])
>
>  This should optimize into an indexscan in 8.2 or later.
>
>                         regards, tom lane
>

---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to
       choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not
       match

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