Stephen Robert Norris wrote:

> Well, no. What it says is that certain values must be escaped (but
> doesn't say which ones). Then it says there are alternate escape
> sequences for some values, which it lists.
>
> It doesn't say "The following table contains the characters which must
> be escaped:", which would be much clearer (and actually useful).

Attached documentation patch updates the wording for bytea input
escaping, per complaint by Stephen Norris above.

Joe Conway
WIN32_DEV
Bruce Momjian 22 years ago
parent 5ea214b590
commit fd4c775481
  1. 7
      doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
<!--
$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml,v 1.119 2003/06/25 03:50:52 momjian Exp $
$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml,v 1.120 2003/07/18 03:45:06 momjian Exp $
-->
<chapter id="datatype">
@ -1062,8 +1062,9 @@ SELECT b, char_length(b) FROM test2;
literal in an <acronym>SQL</acronym> statement. In general, to
escape an octet, it is converted into the three-digit octal number
equivalent of its decimal octet value, and preceded by two
backslashes. Some octet values have alternate escape sequences, as
shown in <xref linkend="datatype-binary-sqlesc">.
backslashes. <xref linkend="datatype-binary-sqlesc"> contains the
characters which must be escaped, and gives the alternate escape
sequences where applicable.
</para>
<table id="datatype-binary-sqlesc">

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