> On Oct 29, 2021, at 2:05 PM, Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
>
> "David G. Johnston" <david.g.johns...@gmail.com> writes:
>> On Friday, October 29, 2021, Philip Semanchuk <phi...@americanefficient.com>
>> wrote:
>>> I would appreciate help with the syntax for querying an array of strings
>>> declared as a psql variable. Here's an example.
>>>
>>> \set important_days ARRAY['monday', 'friday']
>
>> Not sure why the single quotes are getting stripped out but that is the
>> issue. Maybe double them up to escape them like in a normal text literal?
>
> Yeah, that's just the way that \set works (and most other psql backslash
> commands, I believe). You've likely got an issue with whitespace
> disappearing, too, though that might be harmless in this specific example.
>
> regression=# \set foo 'bar baz'
> regression=# \echo :foo
> bar baz
> regression=# \set foo 'bar ''baz'
> regression=# \echo :foo
> bar 'baz
> regression=# \set foo bar ''baz
> regression=# \echo :foo
> barbaz
>
> Not sure offhand how well-documented this is.
Thanks, all. Glad to know I wasn’t missing something obvious.
> On Oct 29, 2021, at 1:52 PM, Pavel Stehule <pavel.steh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> psql variables can hold only text. There is not any type - all is just text.
^^^ This was especially helpful; I’d never considered that before.
Cheers
Philip