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You're reading from  PostgreSQL 14 Administration Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803248974
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Simon Riggs
Simon Riggs
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Simon Riggs

Simon Riggs is the CTO of 2ndQuadrant, having contributed to PostgreSQL as a major developer and committer for 14 years. He has written and designed features for replication, performance, BI, management, and security. Under his guidance, 2ndQuadrant is now a leading developer of open source PostgreSQL, serving hundreds of clients in USA, Europe, and worldwide. Simon is a frequent speaker at many conferences on PostgreSQL Futures. He has worked as a database architect for 30 years.
Read more about Simon Riggs

Gianni Ciolli
Gianni Ciolli
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Gianni Ciolli

Gianni Ciolli is the Vice President for Solutions Architecture at EnterpriseDB (EDB). As a PostgreSQL consultant, he has driven many successful enterprise deployments for customers in every part of the globe.Gianni is respected worldwide as a popular speaker and trainer at many PostgreSQL conferences in Europe and abroad over the last 14 years. He has worked with free and open-source software since the 1990s as an active member of the community (Prato Linux User Group, and Italian PostgreSQL Users Group). Gianni has a Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Florence. He lives in London with his son. His other interests include music, drama, poetry and athletics.
Read more about Gianni Ciolli

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Handling objects with quoted names

PostgreSQL object names can contain spaces and mixed-case characters if we enclose the table names in double quotes. This can cause some difficulties and security issues, so this recipe is designed to help you if you get stuck with this kind of problem.

Case-sensitivity issues can often be a problem for people more used to working with other database systems, such as MySQL, or for people who are facing the challenge of migrating code away from MySQL.

Getting ready

First, let's create a table that uses a quoted name with mixed cases, such as the following:

CREATE TABLE "MyCust"
AS
SELECT * FROM cust;

How to do it...

If we try to access these tables without the proper case, we get this error:

postgres=# SELECT count(*) FROM mycust;
ERROR:   relation "mycust" does not exist
LINE 1: SELECT * FROM mycust;

So, we write it in the correct case:

postgres=# SELECT count(*) FROM MyCust...
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PostgreSQL 14 Administration Cookbook
Published in: Mar 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803248974

Authors (2)

author image
Simon Riggs

Simon Riggs is the CTO of 2ndQuadrant, having contributed to PostgreSQL as a major developer and committer for 14 years. He has written and designed features for replication, performance, BI, management, and security. Under his guidance, 2ndQuadrant is now a leading developer of open source PostgreSQL, serving hundreds of clients in USA, Europe, and worldwide. Simon is a frequent speaker at many conferences on PostgreSQL Futures. He has worked as a database architect for 30 years.
Read more about Simon Riggs

author image
Gianni Ciolli

Gianni Ciolli is the Vice President for Solutions Architecture at EnterpriseDB (EDB). As a PostgreSQL consultant, he has driven many successful enterprise deployments for customers in every part of the globe.Gianni is respected worldwide as a popular speaker and trainer at many PostgreSQL conferences in Europe and abroad over the last 14 years. He has worked with free and open-source software since the 1990s as an active member of the community (Prato Linux User Group, and Italian PostgreSQL Users Group). Gianni has a Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Florence. He lives in London with his son. His other interests include music, drama, poetry and athletics.
Read more about Gianni Ciolli