Re: finding a column by name in psql
| От | Merlin Moncure | 
|---|---|
| Тема | Re: finding a column by name in psql | 
| Дата | |
| Msg-id | b42b73150703120901k53bdeb17vd195e783af16e524@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст  | 
		
| Ответ на | finding a column by name in psql ("Guillaume Bog" <guibog@gmail.com>) | 
| Ответы | 
                	
            		Re: finding a column by name in psql
            		
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| Список | pgsql-general | 
On 3/12/07, Guillaume Bog <guibog@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi everyone, > > I'm now used to using psql to manage my databases into a terminal, and > I found the very convenient "\g |" command that pipes query result in > any shell tool I want. But I still have hard time finding some columns > in some tables (that may have 300+ cols). I would like to pipe the > result of "\d" mytable in some grep but it doesn't work. I have done > it once or twice by SELECTing pg_attrib but this requires a lot of > typing. I tried to store a procedure but apparently I don't have any > language allowed... I'm sure it could do it but and I wondering if I > missed some simpler command that would allow me to conveniently search > into database structure. i.e. something like "\d mytable *_ts" that > could display all cols in mytable ending with "_ts". Have you tried configuring your pager? I use: env: PAGER=less LESS='-iMSx4 -FX' psql: /pset pager=always this allows for spreadsheet style navigation of psql results and you can use search feature of less (slash) to highlight columns/data. merlin
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