ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
Changes the definition of a text search dictionary.
Synopsis
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <name> (
<option> [ = <value> ] [, ... ]
)
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <name> RENAME TO <new_name>
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <name> OWNER TO { <new_owner> | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <name> SET SCHEMA <new_schema>
Description
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
changes the definition of a text search dictionary. You can change the dictionary's template-specific options, or change the dictionary's name or owner.
You must be the owner of the dictionary to use ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
.
Parameters
name
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search dictionary.
option
The name of a template-specific option to be set for this dictionary.
value
The new value to use for a template-specific option. If the equal sign and value are omitted, then any previous setting for the option is removed from the dictionary, allowing the default to be used.
new_name
The new name of the text search dictionary.
new_owner
The new owner of the text search dictionary.
new_schema
The new schema for the text search dictionary.
Template-specific options can appear in any order.
Examples
The following example command changes the stop word list for a Snowball-based dictionary. Other parameters remain unchanged.
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_dict ( StopWords = newrussian );
The following example command changes the language option to dutch
, and removes the stop word option entirely:
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_dict ( language = dutch, StopWords );
The following example command "updates" the dictionary's definition without actually changing anything:
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_dict ( dummy );
(The reason this works is that the option removal code doesn't complain if there is no such option.) This trick is useful when changing configuration files for the dictionary: the ALTER
will force existing database sessions to re-read the configuration files, which they would otherwise never do if they had read them earlier.
Compatibility
There is no ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
statement in the SQL standard.