Is it possible to return multiple result sets from a Postgres function, like in MSSQL:
CREATE PROCEDURE test
AS
SELECT * FROM first_table
SELECT * FROM second_table
A simpler way has been around since PostgreSQL 8.3:
CREATE FUNCTION test()
RETURNS SETOF first_table AS
$func$
BEGIN
RETURN QUERY
SELECT * FROM first_table;
RETURN QUERY
SELECT * FROM second_table; -- has to return same rowtype as first_table!
END
$func$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Call:
SELECT * FROM test();
Both result sets are appended to a single set returned from the function.
See the manual for RETURN QUERY.
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION "pr_GetCustomersAndOrders"()
RETURNS SETOF refcursor AS
$BODY$DECLARE
customerRC refcursor;
orderRC refcursor;
BEGIN
open customerRC FOR
SELECT * FROM customers;
RETURN NEXT customerRC;
open orderRC FOR
SELECT * FROM orders;
RETURN NEXT orderRC;
RETURN;
END;$BODY$
LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' VOLATILE;
ALTER FUNCTION "pr_GetCustomersAndOrders"() OWNER TO postgres;
I.o.w. using refcursors :)
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION public.TestReturnMultipleTales
(
param_coid integer,
ref1 refcursor,
ref2 refcursor
)
RETURNS SETOF refcursor
LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
COST 100
VOLATILE PARALLEL UNSAFE
ROWS 1000
AS $BODY$
DECLARE
BEGIN
OPEN ref1 FOR SELECT * FROM dbo.tbl1 WHERE coid = param_coid;
RETURN NEXT ref1;
OPEN ref2 FOR SELECT * FROM dbo.tbl2 LIMIT 5;
RETURN NEXT ref2;
END;
$BODY$;
USE IN pgSQL Query:-
BEGIN;
SELECT football_players.show_cities_multiple(123456, 'Ref1', 'Ref2');
FETCH ALL IN "Ref1";
FETCH ALL IN "Ref2";
COMMIT;
SELECT football_players.show_cities_multiple(123456, 'Ref1', 'Ref2');
FETCH ALL IN "Ref1";
SELECT football_players.show_cities_multiple(123456, 'Ref1', 'Ref2');
FETCH ALL IN "Ref2";
If first_table and second_table have the same layout, you can also just use
SELECT * FROM first_table WHERE ...
UNION ALL
SELECT * FROM second_table WHERE ...
[EDIT: Thanks to a commenter (whose name is probably not "null" :) ) for pointing out that UNION ALL is faster than UNION.]
Yes.
Example:
test=# create function x () returns setof integer language plpgsql as $$ begin return next 1; return next 2; end $$;
CREATE FUNCTION
test=# select * from x();
x
---
1
2
(2 rows)
You can of course use an existing table/view or a custom type for the returned type.
Example using language SQL:
test=# create table customer (name varchar, birth_date date);
CREATE TABLE
test=# create function y () returns setof customer language sql as $$
select * from customer
union all
select * from customer
$$;
CREATE FUNCTION
test=# insert into customer values ('joe', now()::date);
INSERT 0 1
test=# insert into customer values ('jill', now()::date);
INSERT 0 1
test=# select * from y();
name | birth_date
------+------------
joe | 2009-04-16
jill | 2009-04-16
joe | 2009-04-16
jill | 2009-04-16
(4 rows)
See here for doc
I have a function test_function where I am passing _snapdt as parameter. I want to run this function for several dates (_snapdt) individually in a loop.
Can someone help me with this?
For example I want to run this function for several dates like "2018-01-30" , 2018-02-30" and so on ..
Currently I am running it manually like this:
select * from test_function('2018-01-30') ;
select * from test_function('2018-02-30') ;
Here is the function
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION test_function(_snapdt date)
RETURNS integer
AS
$BODY$
declare rows integer;
BEGIN
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS temp_table;
create table temp_table AS
select col1,col2
from table1
where id=01000 and
snapshot_date=_snapdt
group by col1,col2
distributed randomly;
INSERT INTO standard_table
( snap_date,
col1,
col2
)
SELECT
_snapdt as snap_date,
a.col1,
a.col2,
FROM temp_table a;
GET DIAGNOSTICS rows=ROW_COUNT;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS temp_table;
return rows;
END;
$BODY$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;
use generate_series()
select test_function(t.dt::date)
from generate_series(date '2018-01-30', date '2018-02-28') as t(dt);
If you want to call the function once for each month, change the interval:
select test_function(t.dt::date)
from generate_series(date '2018-01-01', date '2019-12-01', interval '1 month') as t(dt);
In the Below Postgresql Function i am trying to get results from 2 different tables but it throws error ERROR: 42601: a column definition list is required for functions returning "record".Can anyone please help me.
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION load_page_record(IN _session INT) RETURNS RECORD AS
$$
DECLARE r1 RECORD;
DECLARE r2 RECORD;
DECLARE RESULT RECORD;
BEGIN
SELECT array_agg(sq.*) AS arr INTO r1
FROM (SELECT user_id, user_name
FROM "user"
) sq;
SELECT array_agg(sq.*) AS arr INTO r2
FROM (SELECT client_id, client_name
FROM "clients"
) sq;
SELECT r1.arr, r2.arr INTO RESULT;
RETURN RESULT;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
It returns a record,
so you should call the function as below,
select load_page_record(5);
The error come if you call it as a table
select * from load_page_record(5);
If you want to return a table place you query with join inside the body as follows,
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION load_page_record1(IN _session INT)
RETURNS TABLE (column1 integer, column2 integer) as
$BODY$
SELECT column1, column2
FROM
table1 a
join
table2 b
ON a.id = b.id
$BODY$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;
try this, procedur return table
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION load_page_record(IN _session INT)
RETURNS table(col1 record[],col2 record[]) AS
$BODY$
BEGIN
RETURN QUERY
select
(SELECT array_agg(sq.*)
FROM (SELECT user_id, user_name
FROM "user"
) sq
),
(SELECT array_agg(sq.*)
FROM (SELECT client_id, client_name
FROM "clients"
) sq
);
END;
$BODY$ LANGUAGE plpgsql stable;
edit: convert to text, try it
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION load_page_record(IN _session INT)
RETURNS table(col1 text,col2 text) AS
$BODY$
BEGIN
RETURN QUERY
select
(SELECT array_agg(sq.*)
FROM (SELECT user_id, user_name
FROM "user"
) sq
)::text,
(SELECT array_agg(sq.*)
FROM (SELECT client_id, client_name
FROM "clients"
) sq
)::text;
END;
$BODY$ LANGUAGE plpgsql stable;
try with text:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION load_page_record(IN _session INT) RETURNS text AS
$$
DECLARE r1 RECORD;
DECLARE r2 RECORD;
DECLARE RESULT text;
BEGIN
SELECT array_agg(sq.*) AS arr INTO r1
FROM (SELECT 'fdfdfd','fdfdd'
) sq;
SELECT array_agg(sq.*) AS arr INTO r2
FROM (SELECT 'dsds','sdsd'
) sq;
SELECT r1.arr, r2.arr INTO RESULT;
RETURN RESULT;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
and then simply:
select * from load_page_record(8);
but I hope you are aware of the fact that this instruction SELECT r1.arr, r2.arr INTO RESULT; will only assign the first column to RESULT?
I am creating a Postgresql function in order to handle a negative offset. When the offset is negative then my function should return 0. However, when I try to run this function, there is an error near "row", I am not sure why. What is wrong with my conditional branch?
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
calc_offset(row integer, padding integer) RETURNS integer AS $$
BEGIN
if (row-1-padding) < 0 then return 0;
else return (row-1-padding);
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
WITH all_the_trimmings AS (
SELECT ui.id, ui.name, ui.time,
row_number() over(order by name asc) as rownumber
FROM user_infos ui
), my_row AS (
SELECT * FROM all_the_trimmings WHERE id=1
), the_slice AS (
SELECT * FROM all_the_trimmings LIMIT 5
OFFSET calc_offset((SELECT rownumber FROM my_row)::int,2)
)
SELECT * from my_row
UNION ALL
SELECT * from the_slice;
SQL fiddle for the full picture
Your function calc_offset() can be replaced with this simple SQL function:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION calc_offset(p_row int, padding int)
RETURNS int AS 'SELECT GREATEST ($1 - $2 - 1, 0)' LANGUAGE sql;
And you don't need the function at all. Just use GREATEST with a subselect:
WITH all_the_trimmings AS (
SELECT ui.id, ui.name, ui.time, row_number() OVER (ORDER BY name) AS rn
FROM user_infos ui
)
, my_row AS (
SELECT * FROM all_the_trimmings WHERE id=1
)
SELECT * FROM my_row
UNION ALL
SELECT * FROM all_the_trimmings LIMIT 5
OFFSET GREATEST ((SELECT rn - 3 FROM my_row), 0);
Or simpler:
WITH cte AS (
SELECT ui.id, ui.name, ui.time, row_number() OVER (ORDER BY name) AS rn
FROM user_infos ui
)
SELECT * FROM cte WHERE id = 1
UNION ALL
SELECT * FROM cte LIMIT 5
OFFSET GREATEST ((SELECT rn - 3 FROM cte WHERE id = 1), 0);
SQL Fiddle showing both.
The row parameter is a reserved word. Try replacing it with another name. You were also missing an end if;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
calc_offset(p_row integer, padding integer) RETURNS integer AS $$
BEGIN
if (p_row-1-padding) < 0 then
return 0;
else
return (p_row-1-padding);
end if;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
I am writing a SP, using PL/pgSQL.
I want to return a record, comprised of fields from several different tables. Could look something like this:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields(name text)
RETURNS RECORD AS $$
BEGIN
-- fetch fields f1, f2 and f3 from table t1
-- fetch fields f4, f5 from table t2
-- fetch fields f6, f7 and f8 from table t3
-- return fields f1 ... f8 as a record
END
$$ language plpgsql;
How may I return the fields from different tables as fields in a single record?
[Edit]
I have realized that the example I gave above was slightly too simplistic. Some of the fields I need to be retrieving, will be saved as separate rows in the database table being queried, but I want to return them in the 'flattened' record structure.
The code below should help illustrate further:
CREATE TABLE user (id int, school_id int, name varchar(32));
CREATE TYPE my_type AS (
user1_id int,
user1_name varchar(32),
user2_id int,
user2_name varchar(32)
);
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_two_users_from_school(schoolid int)
RETURNS my_type AS $$
DECLARE
result my_type;
temp_result user;
BEGIN
-- for purpose of this question assume 2 rows returned
SELECT id, name INTO temp_result FROM user where school_id = schoolid LIMIT 2;
-- Will the (pseudo)code below work?:
result.user1_id := temp_result[0].id ;
result.user1_name := temp_result[0].name ;
result.user2_id := temp_result[1].id ;
result.user2_name := temp_result[1].name ;
return result ;
END
$$ language plpgsql
Don't use CREATE TYPE to return a polymorphic result. Use and abuse the RECORD type instead. Check it out:
CREATE FUNCTION test_ret(a TEXT, b TEXT) RETURNS RECORD AS $$
DECLARE
ret RECORD;
BEGIN
-- Arbitrary expression to change the first parameter
IF LENGTH(a) < LENGTH(b) THEN
SELECT TRUE, a || b, 'a shorter than b' INTO ret;
ELSE
SELECT FALSE, b || a INTO ret;
END IF;
RETURN ret;
END;$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Pay attention to the fact that it can optionally return two or three columns depending on the input.
test=> SELECT test_ret('foo','barbaz');
test_ret
----------------------------------
(t,foobarbaz,"a shorter than b")
(1 row)
test=> SELECT test_ret('barbaz','foo');
test_ret
----------------------------------
(f,foobarbaz)
(1 row)
This does wreak havoc on code, so do use a consistent number of columns, but it's ridiculously handy for returning optional error messages with the first parameter returning the success of the operation. Rewritten using a consistent number of columns:
CREATE FUNCTION test_ret(a TEXT, b TEXT) RETURNS RECORD AS $$
DECLARE
ret RECORD;
BEGIN
-- Note the CASTING being done for the 2nd and 3rd elements of the RECORD
IF LENGTH(a) < LENGTH(b) THEN
ret := (TRUE, (a || b)::TEXT, 'a shorter than b'::TEXT);
ELSE
ret := (FALSE, (b || a)::TEXT, NULL::TEXT);
END IF;
RETURN ret;
END;$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Almost to epic hotness:
test=> SELECT test_ret('foobar','bar');
test_ret
----------------
(f,barfoobar,)
(1 row)
test=> SELECT test_ret('foo','barbaz');
test_ret
----------------------------------
(t,foobarbaz,"a shorter than b")
(1 row)
But how do you split that out in to multiple rows so that your ORM layer of choice can convert the values in to your language of choice's native data types? The hotness:
test=> SELECT a, b, c FROM test_ret('foo','barbaz') AS (a BOOL, b TEXT, c TEXT);
a | b | c
---+-----------+------------------
t | foobarbaz | a shorter than b
(1 row)
test=> SELECT a, b, c FROM test_ret('foobar','bar') AS (a BOOL, b TEXT, c TEXT);
a | b | c
---+-----------+---
f | barfoobar |
(1 row)
This is one of the coolest and most underused features in PostgreSQL. Please spread the word.
You need to define a new type and define your function to return that type.
CREATE TYPE my_type AS (f1 varchar(10), f2 varchar(10) /* , ... */ );
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields(name text)
RETURNS my_type
AS
$$
DECLARE
result_record my_type;
BEGIN
SELECT f1, f2, f3
INTO result_record.f1, result_record.f2, result_record.f3
FROM table1
WHERE pk_col = 42;
SELECT f3
INTO result_record.f3
FROM table2
WHERE pk_col = 24;
RETURN result_record;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
If you want to return more than one record you need to define the function as returns setof my_type
Update
Another option is to use RETURNS TABLE() instead of creating a TYPE which was introduced in Postgres 8.4
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields(name text)
RETURNS TABLE (f1 varchar(10), f2 varchar(10) /* , ... */ )
...
To return a single row
Simpler with OUT parameters:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields(_school_id int
, OUT user1_id int
, OUT user1_name varchar(32)
, OUT user2_id int
, OUT user2_name varchar(32)) AS
$func$
BEGIN
SELECT INTO user1_id, user1_name
u.id, u.name
FROM users u
WHERE u.school_id = _school_id
LIMIT 1; -- make sure query returns 1 row - better in a more deterministic way?
user2_id := user1_id + 1; -- some calculation
SELECT INTO user2_name
u.name
FROM users u
WHERE u.id = user2_id;
END
$func$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Call:
SELECT * FROM get_object_fields(1);
You don't need to create a type just for the sake of this plpgsql function. It may be useful if you want to bind multiple functions to the same composite type. Else, OUT parameters do the job.
There is no RETURN statement. OUT parameters are returned automatically with this form that returns a single row. RETURN is optional.
Since OUT parameters are visible everywhere inside the function body (and can be used just like any other variable), make sure to table-qualify columns of the same name to avoid naming conflicts! (Better yet, use distinct names to begin with.)
Simpler yet - also to return 0-n rows
Typically, this can be simpler and faster if queries in the function body can be combined. And you can use RETURNS TABLE() (since Postgres 8.4, long before the question was asked) to return 0-n rows.
The example from above can be written as:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields2(_school_id int)
RETURNS TABLE (user1_id int
, user1_name varchar(32)
, user2_id int
, user2_name varchar(32)) AS
$func$
BEGIN
RETURN QUERY
SELECT u1.id, u1.name, u2.id, u2.name
FROM users u1
JOIN users u2 ON u2.id = u1.id + 1
WHERE u1.school_id = _school_id
LIMIT 1; -- may be optional
END
$func$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Call:
SELECT * FROM get_object_fields2(1);
RETURNS TABLE is effectively the same as having a bunch of OUT parameters combined with RETURNS SETOF record, just shorter.
The major difference: this function can return 0, 1 or many rows, while the first version always returns 1 row.
Add LIMIT 1 like demonstrated to only allow 0 or 1 row.
RETURN QUERY is simple way to return results from a query directly.
You can use multiple instances in a single function to add more rows to the output.
db<>fiddle here (demonstrating both)
Varying row-type
If your function is supposed to dynamically return results with a different row-type depending on the input, read more here:
Refactor a PL/pgSQL function to return the output of various SELECT queries
If you have a table with this exact record layout, use its name as a type, otherwise you will have to declare the type explicitly:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields
(
name text
)
RETURNS mytable
AS
$$
DECLARE f1 INT;
DECLARE f2 INT;
…
DECLARE f8 INT;
DECLARE retval mytable;
BEGIN
-- fetch fields f1, f2 and f3 from table t1
-- fetch fields f4, f5 from table t2
-- fetch fields f6, f7 and f8 from table t3
retval := (f1, f2, …, f8);
RETURN retval;
END
$$ language plpgsql;
You can achieve this by using simply as a returns set of records using return query.
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION schemaName.get_two_users_from_school(schoolid bigint)
RETURNS SETOF record
LANGUAGE plpgsql
AS $function$
begin
return query
SELECT id, name FROM schemaName.user where school_id = schoolid;
end;
$function$
And call this function as : select * from schemaName.get_two_users_from_school(schoolid) as x(a bigint, b varchar);
you can do this using OUT parameter and CROSS JOIN
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_object_fields(my_name text, OUT f1 text, OUT f2 text)
AS $$
SELECT t1.name, t2.name
FROM table1 t1
CROSS JOIN table2 t2
WHERE t1.name = my_name AND t2.name = my_name;
$$ LANGUAGE SQL;
then use it as a table:
select get_object_fields( 'Pending') ;
get_object_fields
-------------------
(Pending,code)
(1 row)
or
select * from get_object_fields( 'Pending');
f1 | f
---------+---------
Pending | code
(1 row)
or
select (get_object_fields( 'Pending')).f1;
f1
---------
Pending
(1 row)
CREATE TABLE users(user_id int, school_id int, name text);
insert into users values (1, 10,'alice')
,(5, 10,'boy')
,(13, 10,'cassey')
,(17, 10,'delores')
,(4, 11,'elaine');
I setted the user_id as arbitrary int. The function input parameter is the school_id. So if the school_id is 10 you hope to get the following result:
user_id | name | user_id | name
---------+-------+---------+------
1 | alice | 5 | boy
So your query should be something like:
with a as (
select u1.user_id,
u1.name from users u1
where school_id = 10 order by user_id limit 1),
b as
(select u2.user_id,u2.name from users u2
where school_id = 10 order by user_id limit 1 offset 1 )
select * from a cross JOIN b ;
So let's wrap the query to the plpgsql function.
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
get_object_fields2(_school_id int)
RETURNS TABLE (user1_id int
, user1_name text
, user2_id int
, user2_name text)
LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$func$
DECLARE countu integer;
BEGIN
countu := (
select count(*) from users where school_id = _school_id);
IF countu >= 2 THEN
RETURN QUERY
with a as (
select u1.user_id,
u1.name from users u1
where school_id = _school_id
order by user_id limit 1),
b as(
select u2.user_id,u2.name from users u2
where school_id = _school_id
order by user_id limit 1 offset 1 )
select * from a cross JOIN b;
elseif countu = 1 then
return query
select u1.user_id, u1.name,u1.user_id, u1.name
from users u1 where school_id = _school_id;
else
RAISE EXCEPTION 'not found';
end if;
END
$func$;