Re: cast of integer to bool doesn't work (anymore?)
От | Eric Veldhuyzen |
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Тема | Re: cast of integer to bool doesn't work (anymore?) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 20030321141940.GD6540@opium.xs4all.nl обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: cast of integer to bool doesn't work (anymore?) (Achilleus Mantzios <achill@matrix.gatewaynet.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: cast of integer to bool doesn't work (anymore?)
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Список | pgsql-sql |
On Fri, Mar 21, 2003 at 03:54:56PM -0200, Achilleus Mantzios wrote: > On Fri, 21 Mar 2003, Eric Veldhuyzen wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > Here at my work we use on the production servers PostgreSQL version > > 7.2.3, but I have version 7.3.2 (from the Debian distribution) on my > > workstation. Now I noticed yesterday that the query 'select 0::boolean;' > > works on the production server, it gives the output: > > > > # select 0::boolean; > > bool > > ------ > > f > > (1 row) > > > > Perfect. But when I try this on my local version of postgreSQL I get > > this: > > > > # select 0::boolean; > > ERROR: Cannot cast type integer to boolean > > Just wrap 0 with single quotes, > e.g. > # select '0'::boolean; Yeah, I tried that, and yes, that does work from the psql prompt. This basically means that I fool psql into thinking that it is a string, and then forcing it to cast to a boolean, right? But my problem is that it does not work when I use that in the prepare statement from perl. For example: my $sth = $dbh->prepare( "INSERT INTO object_def (name, meant_as_subobject) VALUES (?,?::bool)"); $sth->execute('test', 0); This code gives me the error "DBD::Pg::st execute failed: ERROR: Cannot cast type integer to boolean" on 7.3, but it works on 7.2 and below. If I change the prepare to my $sth = $dbh->prepare( "INSERT INTO object_def (name, meant_as_subobject) VALUES (?,'?'::bool)"); I will get the error "execute called with 2 bind variables, 1 needed" because the perl database driver can't handle the quote characters in a prepare statement. This here is ofcourse a simplyfied example, in our real project the prepare statement is dynamically build by a library that knows the database schema, and tries to do conversions while builing the prepared statement. One if them is checking the columntypes, and replace the ? with ?::bool in the prepared statement if the columntype is of boolean type. Another is something similar if the columntype is a timestamp or date (I haven't tested if that part still works though, I realize now). -- Eric Veldhuyzen xs4all NSA team
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