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Ideally types will be usable without having to specify a sql type
string, so we should keep the information related to parsing them on the
adapter or another object.
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The only type that has a scale is decimal. There's a special case where
decimal columns with 0 scale are type cast to integers if the scale is
not specified. Appears to only affect schema dumping.
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The `:timestamp` type for columns is unused. All database adapters treat
them as the same database type. All code in `ActiveRecord` which changes
its behavior based on the column's type acts the same in both cases.
However, when the type is passed to code that checks for the `:datetime`
type, but not `:timestamp` (such as XML serialization), the result is
unexpected behavior.
Existing schema definitions will continue to work, and the `timestamp`
type is transparently aliased to `datetime`.
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The decision to wrap type registrations in a proc was made for two
reasons.
1. Some cases need to make an additional decision based on the type
(e.g. a `Decimal` with a 0 scale)
2. Aliased types are automatically updated if they type they point to is
updated later. If a user or another adapter decides to change the
object used for `decimal` columns, `numeric`, and `number` will
automatically point to the new type, without having to track what
types are aliased explicitly.
Everything else here should be pretty straightforward. PostgreSQL ranges
had to change slightly, since the `simplified_type` method is gone.
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Part of #15134. In order to perform typecasting polymorphically, we need
to add another argument to the constructor. The order was chosen to
match the `oid_type` on `PostgreSQLColumn`.
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