On Sun, Aug 05, 2007 at 08:18:08PM +0530, Merlin Moncure wrote:
> On 8/3/07, Guy Fraser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Wed, 2007-08-01 at 07:14 +0530, Merlin Moncure wrote:
> > > On 8/1/07, Decibel! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > David Fetter and I just came up with these, perhaps others will find
> > > > them useful:
> > > >
> > > > CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION array_to_set(anyarray, int) RETURNS SETOF 
> > > > anyelement LANGUAGE SQL AS $$
> > > >     SELECT $1[i] from generate_series(array_lower($1, $2), 
> > > > array_upper($1, $2)) i
> > > > $$;
> > > > CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION array_to_set(anyarray) RETURNS SETOF 
> > > > anyelement LANGUAGE SQL AS $$
> > > >     SELECT array_to_set($1, 1)
> > > > $$;
> > >
> > > very nice, although IMO there is a strong justification for these
> > > functions to be in core and written in C for efficiency (along with
> > > array_accum, which I have hand burn from copying and pasting out of
> > > the documentation).
> > >
> > > merlin
> > >
> > Excellent timing guys. :^)
> >
> > I was trying to build a function to list the items of an array, but
> > ran into problems and was going to post what I had been working on.
> >
> > Your functions work great.
> >
> > In case you don't have the function to generate an array from a set
> > here is one I have been using :
> >
> >
> > CREATE AGGREGATE array_accum (
> >     BASETYPE = anyelement,
> >     SFUNC = array_append,
> >     STYPE = anyarray,
> >     INITCOND = '{}'
> > );
> 
> I think that's what just about everyone uses.  Unfortunately the
> reverse of the function (array_to_set above) AFAIK does not map
> directly to the C array API.

Oh, cool, hadn't thought about using an aggregate to do this. That's
probably faster than what I came up with.
-- 
Decibel!, aka Jim Nasby                        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
EnterpriseDB      http://enterprisedb.com      512.569.9461 (cell)

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