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><P
>    Reference pages should follow a standard layout.  This allows
    users to find the desired information more quickly, and it also
    encourages writers to document all relevant aspects of a command.
    Consistency is not only desired among
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    with reference pages provided by the operating system and other
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>    Reference pages that describe executable commands should contain
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        this would be the place to explain it.
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>        Anything that doesn't fit elsewhere, but in particular bugs,
        implementation flaws, security considerations, compatibility
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       </P
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>        Examples
       </P
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        program, they might be listed here.  Usually, this section can
        be omitted.
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><P
>        Cross-references, listed in the following order: other
        <SPAN
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>PostgreSQL</SPAN
> command reference pages,
        <SPAN
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>PostgreSQL</SPAN
> SQL command reference
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>PostgreSQL</SPAN
>
        manuals, other reference pages (e.g., operating system, other
        packages), other documentation.  Items in the same group are
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>    Reference pages describing SQL commands should contain the
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    Also.  The Parameters section is like the Options section, but
    there is more freedom about which clauses of the command can be
    listed.  The Outputs section is only needed if the command returns
    something other than a default command-completion tag.  The Compatibility
    section should explain to what extent
    this command conforms to the SQL standard(s), or to which other
    database system it is compatible.  The See Also section of SQL
    commands should list SQL commands before cross-references to
    programs.
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