The following bug has been logged on the website: Bug reference: 7543 Logged by: Barry Brown Email address: barrybr...@sierracollege.edu PostgreSQL version: 9.1.5 Operating system: Ubuntu 12.04 Description:
I sometime see my users delete all rows from a table using a command like this: DELETE FROM customer *; The question is: what is the star? Is it a table alias or an output_expression? The grammar for DELETE is: [ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] with_query [, ...] ] DELETE FROM [ ONLY ] table [ [ AS ] alias ] [ USING using_list ] [ WHERE condition | WHERE CURRENT OF cursor_name ] [ RETURNING * | output_expression [ [ AS ] output_name ] [, ...] ] According to the grammar, the star could be an alias. We can alias the table being affected with a "normal" alias. The following also works: DELETE FROM customer foo; DELETE FROM customer foo where foo.id = 1; However, the star isn't treated as an alias in this next command. Instead, it generates a syntax error, as one might expected: DELETE FROM customer * where *.id = 1; So perhaps the star is an output_expression. The grammar for the RETURNING clause is: RETURNING * | output_expression [ [ AS ] output_name ] [, ...] Since it has no parentheses to alter the operator precedence, it is interpreted as: (RETURNING *) | (output_expression [ [ AS ] output_name ] [, ...]) In other words, one can write just an output_expression without the RETURNING keyword. However, I'm sure the grammar is supposed to require the RETURNING keyword. Consequently, the grammar ought to be: RETURNING (* | output_expression [ [ AS ] output_name ] [, ...]) The written documentation implies that * is a valid output_expression. In summary: Should * be an acceptable table alias for the DELETE command? Should the grammar for the RETURNING clause include some parentheses to make it clearer what's expected? -- Sent via pgsql-bugs mailing list (pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-bugs