I'm not sure I can propose a scheme that would
work in all situations, but one could simply
considered the built-in data type underlying
the domain.  In my case, this would mean deciding
between character varying and bytea, which seems to
work just fine.

As far as surprising behavior, isn't the scheme
for casting literals already prone to surprises?

TJ

Tom Lane wrote:
"TJ O'Donnell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
I really want two polymorphic functions, one taking
a domain data type using varchar and one bytea.

These aren't polymorphic functions, actually; they're just overloaded.

In that case, postgres complains that it cannot decide
which one to use when called with the
untyped literal 'abc'.

Yeah, functions taking domains as arguments are problematic.  I believe
that with the current resolution rules, a function taking a domain can
only "win" an ambiguous-function comparison if it's an exact match
to the input types --- which in this case means you have to cast the
literal to the domain type.

There's been some talk of trying to rejigger the resolution rules to
make them more friendly to functions that're declared to take domains,
but no one's put forward any concrete proposal.  It's not at all clear
to me how to do it without introducing a lot of surprising behavior :-(

                        regards, tom lane

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