Re: SELECT composite type
От | Tom Lane |
---|---|
Тема | Re: SELECT composite type |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 12793.1144276168@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: SELECT composite type (Niklas Johansson <spot@tele2.se>) |
Ответы |
Re: SELECT composite type
|
Список | pgsql-sql |
Niklas Johansson <spot@tele2.se> writes: > On 5 apr 2006, at 17.57, Michael Burke wrote: >> So I basically want to call get_xy for every row in >> sightings, and use its output for two columns; or perhaps there is >> another way to think of this. > You could try > SELECT foo.x, foo.y, title FROM > (SELECT > get_xy(SetSRID(sightings.location, 26910), 4326) AS foo, > sightings.title > FROM sightings > WHERE sighting_id = 25) bar; Note however that the above is only a cosmetic answer: you avoid typing the function call twice, but the planner will "flatten" the subquery into the outer query and thereby end up with two evaluations anyway. If you're really intent on avoiding the extra evaluation then you need to do something to prevent the flattening from happening. One handy trick is to use a LIMIT or OFFSET clause in the subquery as an optimization fence: SELECT foo.x, foo.y, title FROM (SELECT get_xy(SetSRID(sightings.location, 26910), 4326) AS foo, sightings.title FROM sightings WHERE sighting_id = 25 OFFSET 0) bar; There are some other features such as DISTINCT that also prevent flattening, but there seems no call for that here. regards, tom lane
В списке pgsql-sql по дате отправления: