Tom Lane wrote:

Following up this gripe
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-sql/2003-09/msg00044.php
I've realized that plpgsql just assumes that the test expression
of an IF, WHILE, or EXIT statement is a boolean expression.  It
doesn't take any measures to ensure this is the case or convert
the value if it's not the case.  This seems pretty bogus to me.

However ... with the code as it stands, for pass-by-reference datatypes
any nonnull value will appear TRUE, while for pass-by-value datatypes
any nonzero value will appear TRUE.  I fear that people may actually be
depending on these behaviors, particularly the latter one which is
pretty reasonable if you're accustomed to C.  So while I'd like to throw
an error if the argument isn't boolean, I'm afraid of breaking people's
function definitions.

Here are some possible responses, roughly in order of difficulty
to implement:

1. Leave well enough alone (and perhaps document the behavior).

2. Throw an error if the expression doesn't return boolean.

3. Try to convert nonbooleans to boolean using plpgsql's usual method
  for cross-type coercion, ie run the type's output proc to get a
  string and feed it to bool's input proc.  (This seems unlikely to
  avoid throwing an error in very many cases, but it'd be the most
  consistent with other parts of plpgsql.)

4. Use the parser's coerce_to_boolean procedure, so that nonbooleans
  will be accepted in exactly the same cases where they'd be accepted
  in a boolean-requiring SQL construct (such as CASE).  (By default,
  none are, so this isn't really different from #2.  But people could
  create casts to boolean to override this behavior in a controlled
  fashion.)

Any opinions about what to do?



It won't bite me so maybe I don't have a right to express an opinion :-)

plpgsql is not C - it appears to be in the Algol/Pascal/Ada family, which do tend to avoid implicit type conversion.

On that basis, option 2 seems like it might be the right answer and also the one most likely to break lots of existing functions. Maybe the right thing would be to deprecate relying on implicit conversion to boolean for one release cycle and then make it an error.

cheers

andrew



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