From: Thomas G. Lockhart Date: Fri, 1 Oct 1999 15:20:06 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Remove xref's to reference pages since they are not available in X-Git-Tag: REL7_0~1396 X-Git-Url: https://granicus.if.org/sourcecode?a=commitdiff_plain;h=b14a46513151763133be8e89825d5abf702c70d5;p=postgresql Remove xref's to reference pages since they are not available in the Programmer's Guide. --- diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/xfunc.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/xfunc.sgml index 879f6f6667..ea7f085f49 100644 --- a/doc/src/sgml/xfunc.sgml +++ b/doc/src/sgml/xfunc.sgml @@ -363,8 +363,8 @@ WARN::function declared to return type EMP does not retrieve (EMP.*) the dynamic loader loads the function's object code into memory, and links the function with the running Postgres executable. The SQL syntax - for the command links the SQL function + for CREATE FUNCTION + links the SQL function to the C source function in one of two ways. If the SQL function has the same name as the C source function the first form of the statement is used. The string argument in the AS clause is the @@ -377,9 +377,13 @@ WARN::function declared to return type EMP does not retrieve (EMP.*) for. This link symbol is just the function name in the C source code. - After it is used for the first time, a dynamically loaded, user - function is retained in memory, and future calls to the function - only incur the small overhead of a symbol table lookup. + + + After it is used for the first time, a dynamically loaded, user + function is retained in memory, and future calls to the function + only incur the small overhead of a symbol table lookup. + + @@ -979,12 +983,11 @@ memmove(destination->data, buffer, 40); As of Postgres v6.6, the alternative - form of the AS clause for the SQL CREATE - FUNCTION command described in - decouples the SQL function name from the function name in the C - source code. This is now the preferred technique to accomplish - function overloading. + form of the AS clause for the SQL + CREATE FUNCTION command + decouples the SQL function name from the function name in the C + source code. This is now the preferred technique to accomplish + function overloading.