Daniele Varrazzo <daniele.varrazzo@gmail.com> writes:
> I'm trying to use a domain to define a data type constraint, let's say
> an hypothetical uk_post_code with pattern LNNLL. I'd enforce no
> whitespaces, all uppercase.
> I would also need a way to normalize before validate: given an input
> such as "w3 6bq", normalize it to W36BQ before trying to apply the
> check. It would be great if I could give this function the same name
> of the domain, so that uk_post_code('w3 6bq') would return W36BQ cast
> to the domain.
That particular case isn't going to work unless you choose a different
function name --- as you've found out, the parser prefers the
interpretation that this means the same as 'w3 6bq'::uk_post_code,
which is not a cast but just a literal of the named type.
If you were willing to write something like uk_post_code('w3 6bq'::text)
and define your function as taking text (or varchar if that turns you on),
it should work. Likewise anytime the argument is a variable/expression
of known type text. But with a bare untyped literal, no.
regards, tom lane