ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY — change the definition of a text search dictionary
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARYname(option[ =value] [, ... ] ) ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARYnameRENAME TOnew_nameALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARYnameOWNER TO {new_owner| CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARYnameSET SCHEMAnew_schema
   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.
  
nameThe name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search dictionary.
optionThe name of a template-specific option to be set for this dictionary.
valueThe 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_nameThe new name of the text search dictionary.
new_ownerThe new owner of the text search dictionary.
new_schemaThe new schema for the text search dictionary.
Template-specific options can appear in any order.
The following example command changes the stopword 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 stopword 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 otherwise they would never do if they had read them earlier.
  
   There is no ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY statement in
   the SQL standard.