Hi, I am no sure if it is a bug at all, but according to the documented features of UPDATE I would suppose it is.
UPDATE RETURNING clause cannot be used in SELECT * FROM ( query ) AS query_alias statement. For example: update issues set issue_value = 'value to assign' where id in ( <some ids> ) returning id, last_update Is valid and compiles and is executed without any problems. It is actually returning IDs and last update timestamps of the updated records of the ITEMS table. BUT SELECT * FROM ( update issues set issue_value = 'value to assign' where id in ( <some ids> ) returning id, last_update ) as update_results does not even compile and throws the following error: ERROR: syntax error at or near "set" LINE 1: select * from ( update issues set issue_value = 'v... ^ ********** Error ********** ERROR: syntax error at or near "set" SQL state: 42601 Character: 40 The real example is much more complicated with not such a trivial update and with the outer SELECT calculating count and max of the last_update... By now I have to run it in a PL/SQL FOR .. IN LOOP to calculate the results, but it would be nice to have the RETURNING clause documented better. With best regards, -- Valentine Gogichashvili ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster