White space can of course make things easy to read, but psql seems to ignore those blank lines.  Is there any way to retain them in psql output?

$ cat spaces.sql
insert into foo values(1);
insert into foo values(2);
insert into foo values(3);
insert into foo values(4);


insert into bar values(1);
insert into bar values(2);
insert into bar values(3);
insert into bar values(4);


insert into snaggle values(1);
insert into snaggle values(2);
insert into snaggle values(3);
insert into snaggle values(4);


insert into frob values(1);
insert into frob values(2);
insert into frob values(3);
insert into frob values(4);


postgres@haggis:~$ psql12 test -af spaces.sql
insert into foo values(1);
INSERT 0 1
insert into foo values(2);
INSERT 0 1
insert into foo values(3);
INSERT 0 1
insert into foo values(4);
INSERT 0 1
insert into bar values(1);
INSERT 0 1
insert into bar values(2);
INSERT 0 1
insert into bar values(3);
INSERT 0 1
insert into bar values(4);
INSERT 0 1
insert into snaggle values(1);
INSERT 0 1
insert into snaggle values(2);
INSERT 0 1
insert into snaggle values(3);
INSERT 0 1
insert into snaggle values(4);
INSERT 0 1
insert into frob values(1);
INSERT 0 1
insert into frob values(2);
INSERT 0 1
insert into frob values(3);
INSERT 0 1
insert into frob values(4);
INSERT 0 1


--
Born in Arizona, moved to Babylonia.


Reply via email to