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Sigh, I managed to break the no-links-in-plain-text-docs rule too...
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doc/src/sgml/release-8.5.sgml

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<!-- $PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/release-8.5.sgml,v 1.12 2009/12/19 02:38:54 tgl Exp $ -->
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<!-- $PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/release-8.5.sgml,v 1.13 2009/12/19 05:37:01 tgl Exp $ -->
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<sect1 id="release-8-5">
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<title>Release 8.5alpha3</title>
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meant, sometimes resulting in surprising behavior. Now, PL/pgSQL
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can assume the variable is meant, or assume the table column is
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meant, or throw an error in ambiguous cases. For safety the default
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is to throw error. To configure this see <xref
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linkend="plpgsql-var-subst">.</emphasis>
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is to throw error. To configure this see <link
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linkend="plpgsql-var-subst">the PL/pgSQL documentation</link>.</emphasis>
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</para>
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<para>
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<emphasis>Error reporting is much nicer: it no longer shows edited
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<para>
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<emphasis>Note that this change affects the set of keywords that are
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reserved in PL/pgSQL (i.e., cannot be the name of a PL/pgSQL
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variable). Now, all keywords shown as reserved in <xref
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linkend="sql-keywords-appendix"> are reserved for PL/pgSQL purposes
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as well. However, many PL/pgSQL-only keywords that were formerly
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treated as reserved no longer are. As in regular SQL, you can
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double-quote a variable's name if you want to use a name that
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conflicts with a reserved keyword.</emphasis>
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variable). Now, all keywords shown as reserved in <link
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linkend="sql-keywords-appendix">Appendix C</link> are reserved for
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PL/pgSQL purposes as well. However, many PL/pgSQL-only keywords
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that were formerly treated as reserved no longer are. As in regular
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SQL, you can double-quote a variable's name if you want to use a
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name that conflicts with a reserved keyword.</emphasis>
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</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>

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