You cannot use a "name" in a WHERE clause and aliases are specifically for aliasing table names only. (An alias reference would look like "WHERE alias.column_name > 10".) The documentation for "AS name" usage specifically says a "name" cannot be used in a WHERE clause. I believe you will have to duplicate the gpsdistance() invocation in the WHERE clause as well. SELECT DISTINCT zip_code, gpsdistance(34.2865, 118.435, latitude, longitude) AS distance FROM zipcodes WHERE gpsdistance(34.2865, 118.435, latitude, longitude) <= 10.0 Phil Culberson DAT Services -----Original Message----- From: Ed Loehr [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2000 1:21 PM To: Scott Holmes Cc: pgsql-general Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Need help with attributes... Scott Holmes wrote: > > I created a latitude/longitude function (it's Richard Lynch's, actually) > that returns the distance between to points. What I don't know how to do > is use this value as a filter in the select statement: > > PostgreSQL Error: 1 (ERROR: Attribute 'distance' not found ) > select distinct zip_code, gpsdistance(34.2865, 118.435, latitude, > longitude) as distance from zipcodes where distance > <= 10.0 > > The value for distance is actually available, however: > > > select distinct zip_code, gpsdistance(34.2865, 118.435, latitude, > longitude) as distance from zipcodes where zip_code > like '913%' > > 91301 16.3049416821461, > 91302 12.858968990111, > 91303 8.71667347958831, > 91304 8.67013652211651, > 91305 8.45399567001425, > 91306 ..... > > Any assistance on this question of syntax would be gratefully accepted Double-quote distance to make it an alias rather than a column name. Then, I'm not sure you can use the double-quoted version in the where clause or not... Regards, Ed Loehr