"PostgreSQL Bugs List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Under beta3, the following behaviour is observed:
> test=# create or replace function execute_sql(text) returns void AS $$begin > execute $1; return; end; $$ language plpgsql; > CREATE FUNCTION > test=# > test=# select execute_sql('create table a (i integer); insert into a(i) > values(1);'); > ERROR: relation "a" does not exist > CONTEXT: SQL query "create table a (i integer); insert into a(i) > values(1);" > PL/pgSQL function "execute_sql" line 1 at execute statement This is happening because EXECUTE now parses and plans the whole string in one go, so that it tries to plan the INSERT before the CREATE has been carried out. You would see the same behavior if you tried for instance to execute those two commands as the body of an SQL function. I am inclined to regard this as "not a bug", and tell you to execute the two queries in separate EXECUTE commands. I'm not sure it's worth the substantial additional complexity in spi.c that would be needed to preserve the old behavior --- especially when the documentation does not suggest anywhere that you can use EXECUTE to execute more than one command in the first place. Anyone else have an opinion? regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend