Le 27/12/2010 18:57, Michael Satterwhite a écrit :
> I'm new to PostgreSQL, but have worked with other databases. I'm trying to 
> write a trigger to default a timestamp column to a fixed interval before 
> another. The test setup is as follows:
> 
> create table test
> (     date1 timestamp,
>       date2 timestamp
> );
> 
> create or replace function t_listing_startdate() returns trigger as 
> $t_listing_startdate$
>       begin
>               if NEW.date2 is null then
>                       NEW.date2 := NEW.date1 - interval '7 day';
>               end if;
>               return NEW;
>       end;
> $t_listing_startdate$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
> 
> CREATE TRIGGER t_listing_startdate before insert or update on test
>       for each row execute procedure t_listing_startdate();
> 
> Insert into test(date1) values('May 4, 2012');
> INSERT 0 1
> test=# select * from test;
>         date1        | date2 
> ---------------------+-------
>  2012-04-27 00:00:00 | 
> (1 row)
> 
> I'm obviously missing something ... and probably something obvious. Why is 
> date2 still null?
> 

I'm not sure it'll help you. I copy/pasted your SQL script in my 9.0.2
release. Worked great.

What does \d says about your table? your trigger could be disabled.


-- 
Guillaume
 http://www.postgresql.fr
 http://dalibo.com

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