Re: plpgsql: PERFORM vs. SELECT INTO (PERFORM not setting FOUND variable?)
От | Tom Lane |
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Тема | Re: plpgsql: PERFORM vs. SELECT INTO (PERFORM not setting FOUND variable?) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 23025.1098734547@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | plpgsql: PERFORM vs. SELECT INTO (PERFORM not setting FOUND variable?) (Marinos Yannikos <mjy@geizhals.at>) |
Список | pgsql-sql |
Marinos Yannikos <mjy@geizhals.at> writes: > create function blup_unique2 (text,text) returns boolean as 'begin > perform (select 1 from blup where t1=$1 or t1=$2 or t2=$1 or t2=$2 or > $1=$2 limit 1); return NOT FOUND; end' LANGUAGE plpgsql; You've got a syntax problem. PERFORM is syntactically like SELECT, so what you wrote is equivalent toSELECT (SELECT 1 FROM blup ....) In other words, you are evaluating a scalar subquery, which is going to return either "1" or "NULL" depending on whether the WHERE matches, or give an error if the WHERE matches multiple rows (a case you wouldn't hit because of the LIMIT). So the outer SELECT produces exactly one row containing the scalar result, and FOUND always ends up TRUE. So what you want is just PERFORM 1 FROM blup ... and then check the FOUND result from that. (The 8.0 docs hopefully explain this more clearly; PERFORM was certainly not very well documented before.) Note that I'm concerned that the performance of this will suck ... in particular you really ought to test the $1=$2 case separately. regards, tom lane
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