Thanks Johnny Metz for the report.
Regression in 71ec102b01fcc85acae3819426a4e02ef423b0fa.
Backport of e20e5d1557785ba71e8ef0ceb8ccb85bdc13840a from main
The current implementation works only for basic examples without
supporting nested structures and doesn't follow "the general principle
that the contained object must match the containing object as to
structure and data contents, possibly after discarding some
non-matching array elements or object key/value pairs from the
containing object".
The current implementation works only for basic examples without
supporting nested structures and doesn't follow "the general principle
that the contained object must match the containing object as to
structure and data contents, possibly after discarding some
non-matching array elements or object key/value pairs from the
containing object".
Thanks to Adam Johnson, Carlton Gibson, Mariusz Felisiak, and Raphael
Michel for mentoring this Google Summer of Code 2019 project and
everyone else who helped with the patch.
Special thanks to Mads Jensen, Nick Pope, and Simon Charette for
extensive reviews.
Co-authored-by: Mariusz Felisiak <felisiak.mariusz@gmail.com>
This patch does not remove all occurrences of the words in question.
Rather, I went through all of the occurrences of the words listed
below, and judged if they a) suggested the reader had some kind of
knowledge/experience, and b) if they added anything of value (including
tone of voice, etc). I left most of the words alone. I looked at the
following words:
- simply/simple
- easy/easier/easiest
- obvious
- just
- merely
- straightforward
- ridiculous
Thanks to Carlton Gibson for guidance on how to approach this issue, and
to Tim Bell for providing the idea. But the enormous lion's share of
thanks go to Adam Johnson for his patient and helpful review.
Adds a reasonably feature complete implementation of full text search
using the built in PostgreSQL engine. It uses public APIs from
Expression and Lookup.
With thanks to Tim Graham, Simon Charettes, Josh Smeaton, Mikey Ariel
and many others for their advice and review. Particular thanks also go
to the supporters of the contrib.postgres kickstarter.