>>> "Ian Sillitoe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 03/04/08 5:49 AM >>>


I'm trying to JOIN two tables (well a table and a resultset from a PL/pgsql
function) where a joining column can be NULL


In  a join, no value can be ascribed to a null field, so the equivalence fails. 
You can do tests like IS NULL, which strictly speaking is test for meeting a 
condition (that of not having any value), not a test for equivalence. As 
(simplistically) the condition NULL does equal the condition NULL, (NULL = 
NULL) is true.

The simplest approach is perhaps to have a value which does not occur naturally 
(like -1), as a substitute for nulls in the relevant columns. I believe this 
can be achieved via a view in your case, (pun intended :-), but which may be 
less efficient if performance is an issue:

create view depth_v as
select d.id,
          d.name,
          case when (d.depth1 is null) then -1 else d.depth1 end as depth1,
          case when (d.depth2 is null) then -1 else d.depth2 end as depth2,    
          case when (d.depth3 is null) then -1 else d.depth3 end as depth3,
          case when (d.depth4 is null) then -1 else d.depth4 end as depth4,
          case when (d.depth5 is null) then -1 else d.depth5 end as depth5
from depth_table d;

You could then join against this view instead of your underlying table, eg:

select c.* from get_cathcode('1.10.8') c JOIN depth_v t USING(depth1, depth2, 
depth3, depth4);

The view will not have any NULL values in the depth fields, so the join should 
work.

see: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/static/functions-conditional.html

(Incidentally, if you are storing bathymetry or CTD data, I'd be interested in 
seeing your db structures, as I may be doing some work in that area soon :-)


HTH,

  Brent Wood

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