I’m fairly confident you can do this using a Rule. It would even be fairly simple.
Be careful, though: Rules are Postgres’ biggest potential foot gun. Guyren G Howe On Aug 15, 2023 at 08:05 -0700, Russell Rose | Passfield Data Systems <russellr...@passfield.co.uk>, wrote: > Hi there > > I am trying to convert a SQL Anywhere database to postgres. Within SQL > anywhere a field can have a default value of ‘last user’. This means that > when you perform an update on a table, if the field is not explicitly set > then the current user is used. So for instance if I have a field called > mod_user in a table, but when I do an update on the table and do not set > mod_user then SQL Anywhere sets the field to current_uer. I have tried to > replicate this using a postgres trigger in the before update. However, if I > do not set the value then it automatically picks up the value that was > already in the field. Is there a way to tell the difference between me > setting the value to the same as the previous value and postgres > automatically picking it up. > > If the field myfield contains the word ‘me’. Can I tell the difference > between: > Update table1 set field1=’something’,myfield=’me’ > And > Update table1 set field1=’something’ >