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authorPeter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>2024-04-24 11:31:47 +0200
committerPeter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>2024-04-24 11:37:25 +0200
commitb51dff73fa7361259aeaa2c1c3625b17cfd75d09 (patch)
treef7ea2f62b211e7724028b189587341244fc0e45b
parent0e56b2b9447b3441fa0408680ec52c1cd0b717cd (diff)
downloadpostgresql-b51dff73fa7361259aeaa2c1c3625b17cfd75d09.tar.gz
postgresql-b51dff73fa7361259aeaa2c1c3625b17cfd75d09.zip
doc: Correct jsonpath string literal escapes description
The paragraph describing the JavaScript string literals allowed in jsonpath expressions unnecessarily mentions JSON by erroneously listing \v as allowed by JSON and mentioning the \xNN and \u{N...} backslash escapes as deviations from JSON when in fact both are accepted by ECMAScript/JavaScript. Fix this by only referring to JavaScript. Author: Erik Wienhold <ewie@ewie.name> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1EB17DF9-2636-484B-9DD0-3CAB19C4F5C4@justatheory.com
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/json.sgml15
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/json.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/json.sgml
index 87665dbe178..e00e11bff7b 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/json.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/json.sgml
@@ -695,21 +695,20 @@ SELECT jdoc->'guid', jdoc->'name' FROM api WHERE jdoc @@ '$.tags[*] == "qui"';
In particular, the way to write a double quote within an embedded string
literal is <literal>\"</literal>, and to write a backslash itself, you
must write <literal>\\</literal>. Other special backslash sequences
- include those recognized in JSON strings:
+ include those recognized in JavaScript strings:
<literal>\b</literal>,
<literal>\f</literal>,
<literal>\n</literal>,
<literal>\r</literal>,
<literal>\t</literal>,
<literal>\v</literal>
- for various ASCII control characters, and
- <literal>\u<replaceable>NNNN</replaceable></literal> for a Unicode
- character identified by its 4-hex-digit code point. The backslash
- syntax also includes two cases not allowed by JSON:
+ for various ASCII control characters,
<literal>\x<replaceable>NN</replaceable></literal> for a character code
- written with only two hex digits, and
- <literal>\u{<replaceable>N...</replaceable>}</literal> for a character
- code written with 1 to 6 hex digits.
+ written with only two hex digits,
+ <literal>\u<replaceable>NNNN</replaceable></literal> for a Unicode
+ character identified by its 4-hex-digit code point, and
+ <literal>\u{<replaceable>N...</replaceable>}</literal> for a Unicode
+ character code point written with 1 to 6 hex digits.
</para>
<para>